No, Dr. Moffic, That Is Not the... Answer!
In his article “To Drive or Not to Drive? That Is the…” (The Ethical Way,
Clinical Psychiatry News, Volume 35, Issue 10, Page 41 (October, 2007), Dr. H.
Steven Moffic has established a new duty of treating psychiatrists to evaluate
the “fitness to drive” of each patient, and a new exception to physician patient
privilege “…when you are reasonably sure of potential danger” arising from
psychiatrically impaired ability to drive.
Dr. Moffic has paid scant attention to the damage such a conflict of role or
interest might have on the treatment relationship. He also failed to reference
any ethical precept, including the most relevant: “A psychiatrist who regularly
practices outside his or her area of professional competence should be
considered unethical.” (American Psychiatric Association, The Principles of
Medical Ethics With Annotations Especially Applicable to Psychiatry, 2006
Edition http://psych.org/psych_pract/ethics/ppaethics.cfm; accessed November 5,
2007). Instead, he takes the position that the treating psychiatrist should
perform even a questionably competent evaluation because “practically speaking,
such information usually is difficult to obtain.” He described this difficulty
in one case as arising only from the fact that the patient “lived alone.”
Regardless of whether a patient lives alone, a forensic psychiatrist can answer
questions about disability, competence or capacity, and fitness with little or
no conflict of role or interest, leaving your relationship with your patient
unharmed.
The duty of a clinical psychiatrist is to diagnose and treat mental illness. The
only well-accepted exceptions are the Tarasoff duty to protect, the duty to
report physician misconduct, and the duty to notify authorities of child abuse.
There is no duty to “fill out forms.” There is no duty to ensure that a patient
can obtain a license to drive a motor vehicle, to practice medicine or to fly an
airplane. There is no duty to obtain insurance money for a patient. If a duty to
protect the public from drivers impaired by their medications or mental
disorders has been established, Dr. Moffic should cite applicable statutory or
case law.
Treating psychiatrists are no more qualified to perform "clinical assessments"
of fitness for driving than to determine whether their patients should or should
not be permitted to own or use firearms, return to work, be considered disabled,
be considered competent to make a will, or to stand trial. They are not
qualified to determine whether a patient is fit to procreate, raise children, or
ride a bicycle. All such assessments result in a conflict of role, if not a
conflict of interest, which will probably interfere with the physician’s care of
the patient.
Dr. Moffic recommends that we “Do receive informed consent” but fails to specify
to what the patient must consent. The need to obtain authorization to release
information is obvious. The clinician who follows this recommendation should
also, however, advise the patient of the limitations of the psychiatrist’s
ability to perform a “clinical assessment of the patient’s driving” and the
potential adverse effect on the treatment relationship. He should also warn the
patient before undertaking a psychiatric evaluation that he might determine that
the patient is unfit to drive and that he might report this to “authorities”
whether the patient wants him to or not.
As long as psychiatrists like Dr. Moffic find it more expedient to “just sign
the form,” attorneys, insurers, bureaucrats, and a host of other third parties
will exploit this free and easy alternative to forensic evaluation with no
regard for the resulting damage to the doctor-patient relationship or for the
quality of the assessment.
Dr. Moffic asks, “What is the clinician to do?” when your patient asks you to
“fill out a form.” The answer: Focus on treating the patient to the best of your
ability and to follow your instincts and the admonition of Nancy Reagan and,
“Just say no.”
February 21, 2008
-the editor
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