California medical board could be facing real changes

[b]California medical board could be facing real changes
A report recommends teaming investigators and prosecutors early in cases against doctors. Physicians may pay more in fees to fund the work. [/b]
By Damon Adams, AMNews staff. Feb. 14, 2005.
From: http://www.ama-assn.org/amednews/2005/02/14/prsg0214.htm
Physicians in California are bracing for a possible increase in medical license fees -- the first hike in 11 years -- to help fund improvements to the Medical Board of California. But another possibility is that the state may abolish the board under Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's plan to eliminate many state boards.
A state-mandated review of the medical board determined it takes too long to resolve complaints against physicians, and its program to monitor doctors with alcohol and abuse problems is flawed and understaffed. The report recommends the board raise the license fee that physicians pay every two years from $600 to $800, which would allow the board to restore about 45 positions it lost to budget cuts from 2001 to 2003.
"Medical boards have to be sufficiently funded because enforcement is very expensive. What we found was a combination of problems, some within the board's control, some outside of the board's control," said Julianne D'Angelo Fellmeth, an independent monitor who issued the report.
Fellmeth presented her findings to a state legislative committee on Jan. 25. She said the board takes an average of about 2


Recent comments
15 weeks 6 hours ago
16 weeks 4 days ago
27 weeks 4 hours ago
29 weeks 2 days ago
30 weeks 3 days ago
33 weeks 5 days ago
36 weeks 3 days ago
37 weeks 1 day ago
42 weeks 6 hours ago
42 weeks 5 days ago