Consultation Opportunity


Physicians/Medical Students with Blood-borne Viral Infections

The Council of the College has approved in principle an amended policy to address physicians and medical students with blood-borne viral infections (BBVI).  This amended policy was drafted following an initial round of stakeholder consultation, and reflects a modified approach that is more reflective of privacy law and human rights principles.  The Council has also approved in principle a proposed amendment to Bylaw 24.1, “Reporting of Blood-borne Viral Infections.”

The Council directed that the proposed amended policy and bylaw be widely circulated to physicians, health care organizations and the public to seek feedback on the documents and the proposed new approach to addressing physicians/medical students with BBVI.

Background

The College Council recognized that its current policy “Hepatitis B/C/HIV-Infected Physicians/Medical Students and Physician/Medical Students with AIDS” and Bylaw 24.1 “Reporting of Blood Borne Infections” were outdated and did not accurately reflect the reporting and monitoring process that is currently followed.  In addition, it recognized that the current obligation to report is broader than is justifiable from a human rights and privacy law perspective, which resulted in the College obtaining information that was not necessary for it to perform its regulatory function and to protect the public.

In addition, there was a recognition that the monitoring of physicians/medical students with BBVI would more appropriately fall under the Physician Health Program (PHP) of the Saskatchewan Medical Association (SMA), rather than remain within the office of the College Registrar.

The Council Committee on Physician Health undertook preliminary consultation with various stakeholders and reviewed the policies adopted by other medical regulatory authorities.  The Committee then drafted the amended policy and bylaw based on feedback received from other organizations, guidance obtained from the policy documents adopted by other medical regulatory authorities, and from Council as a whole. 

One of the primary changes in the proposed policy and bylaw is that expectations are broken down into three distinct areas:  1) expectations applicable to all physicians, 2) expectations applicable to all physicians who perform exposure prone procedures (EPPs), and 3) expectations applicable to all seropositive physicians who perform EPPs.

If the amended policy and bylaw are adopted, there will need to be an appropriate transition to the new reporting expectations and monitoring procedures.  The Council anticipates that this transition will be established collaboratively by the College’s Expert Advisory Committee (EAC) and the PHP Committee.

 

Consultation Request

The Council anticipates that it will consider feedback from stakeholders, including members of the profession, at its meeting on September 25, 2020.  The Council would like to hear from you!  If you have concerns with the proposed changes, it would be helpful if you explain the reasons for those concerns, as well as any other suggested approach. 

 

How to Respond 

In order for the College to consider feedback and correlate feedback for the Council in time for the next Council meeting, all feedback should be provided to the College no later than September 1, 2020.

Please complete the linked survey.  Alternatively, feedback can be provided to communications@cps.sk.ca.

 

MEDICAL ASSISTANCE IN DYING – Draft Policy for Saskatchewan

 

Background

The Canadian Government has adopted legislation to regulate medical assistance in dying (MAID). That legislation authorized Canadian physicians, and nurse practitioners in some provinces, to assess whether patients meet the requirements for medical assistance in dying and, if they do, to either administer the pharmaceutical agents that will cause the patient’s death, or prescribe pharmaceutical agents that will cause the patient’s death.

While the legislation established a number of requirements for medical assistance in dying to occur, some details are not addressed in the legislation. That is left for the provinces or regulatory bodies to address.

The Government of Saskatchewan established a provincial working group with broad representation from a number of groups to assist in developing appropriate standards for physicians and nurse practitioners who deal with medical assistance in dying.

At its September, 2016 meeting, the Council of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Saskatchewan adopted a policy that addressed medical assistance in dying which was provided in hospitals or similar settings. That policy described the requirements that physicians must meet to comply with Canadian legislation and established standards for the administration of pharmaceutical agents that are intended to cause the patient’s death.

The provincial working group subsequently provided recommendations related to patient self-administration. The Council of the College met on January 20, 2017 and approved those recommendations in principle for the purpose of consulting physicians and the public. The Council will consider responses to this consultation request at its meeting on March 25 and expects to adopt a final policy on that date.

 

Subject of Consultation

The Council of the College seeks your input specifically on the recommendations related to patient self-administration as outlined below.

 

Summary of the recommendations from the provincial working group

The working group addressed two primary issues:

1. Should a physician who prescribes the pharmaceutical agents that are intended to cause the patient’s death be required to be immediately available to complete administration by intravenous agents if something goes wrong with the patient’s self-administration?

2. Should there be a process which approves physicians who wish to participate in medical assistance in dying? If so, who should do that and what should be the process?


The Council agreed with the working committee’s recommendations when it approved in principle the redraft of the College policy. The draft of the College’s Medical Assistance in Dying Policy states that:

1. A physician who prescribes pharmaceutical agents for self-administration should receive those pharmaceutical agents from a pharmacy and personally deliver the pharmaceutical agents to the patient at a time that the patient and the physician agree the patient will self-administer. The physician should be required to be immediately available, with the pharmaceutical agents and equipment necessary to administer medical assistance in dying by intravenous means if patient self-administration fails.

2. A physician who will assess a patient to determine whether the patient meets the criteria to receive medical assistance in dying or who prescribes or administers the pharmaceutical agents to cause the patient’s death must be approved by the College to do so if the medical assistance in dying will occur in a place that is not a Regional Health Authority Facility.


The Council was aware that both issues are controversial and that individuals have expressed inconsistent positions on these two issues. The Council’s perspective in approving in principle the policy is that:

1. We currently do not have sufficient information to know what risks exist that a patient may not be able to complete self-administration of pharmaceutical agents to cause death. There are reports of patients who have been unable to complete swallowing pharmaceutical agents or who have vomited after partially consuming the pharmaceutical agents. If no physician is present to complete medical assistance in dying in such circumstances, the consequences may be catastrophic for the patient and the patient’s family.

2. This is an issue to be revisited when better information is available, which should be not more than one year after a policy is adopted, to determine if there should be changes to the policy. Such a review should be based upon the best available evidence of the experience with patient self-administration. That review should also consider whether the requirement that a physician be available is a barrier to patient access to medical assistance in dying.

3. The College currently has a requirement that physicians cannot change their scope of practice without approval from the College. Assessing patients for eligibility for medical assistance in dying is a change of a physician’s scope of practice. The College expects that in situations where Regional Health Authorities have approved physicians to assess patients for eligibility for medical assistance in dying, or have approved physicians to administer medical assistance in dying, that approval will be sufficient for the College to approve the change in scope of practice.

 

Related Documents


Provincial Committee Report
Redrafted Policy - Medical Assistance in Dying  (complete version)



How to Respond 

You may provide your response by following the link below, or send an e-mail to communications@cps.sk.ca.  

Council will review and consider all responses at its regular meeting on March 24-25, 2017.

Deadline for responses: March 8, 201