Abstract

Massachusetts recently became the first state in the United States to publish physician malpractice histories and hospital disciplinary records. On August 9, 1996, Governor William F. Weld signed the Physician Profile Act (Profile Act or Act) into law, making “profiles” of the Commonwealth’s approximately twentyseven thousand doctors available to the public. Under the Act, the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine (Board) provides information on physicians’ insurance plans, specialties, training, honors, and malpractice histories over a toll-free telephone number, through the Internet and on CD-ROM.The Act developed partially as a legislative response to a series of Boston Globe articles appearing in late 1994 which savaged the Board. Spotlighting a number of high-profile iatrogenic incidents, this highly charged series of articles, accompanied by a blistering editorial, alleged that some patients suffered substandard medical care at the hands of physicians who had been sued repeatedly for malpractice but never disciplined by the Board.

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