Bad Journalism

CBC’s Canadian doctors should face regular testing: medical school head is a great example of poor journalism. The gist of the article is simple: a doctor has recommended that Canadian doctors should be periodically recertified. The journalist has found another doctor else who says “No! doctors shouldn’t be retested.” Without talking to the journalist, we can’t tell if that was to create a sense of conflict, or to make the story more “balanced.”

There are three problems here:

  1. The No doctor’s statement:

    What we do every day is not really a book learning thing, [...] To say, in fact, that because you pass an exam makes you a good physician every 10 years is absolutely wrong.

    is exactly refuted by the CMAJ editorial:
    In Quebec, investigators found that family physicians’ scores on their certification examination and Medical Council of Canada Qualifying Examination were related to provision of quality care after 4–7 years in practice. More recently, Holmboe and colleagues found that physicians’ scores on the American Board of Internal Medicine’s Maintenance of Certification examination was associated with higher rates of performance in care for Medicare patients.
    which goes on to cite the studies in question.
  2. The Yes doctor, Wendy Levinson has qualifications as a medical instructor, and appears to study how patients interact with their doctors and is a chair at department of medicine.
  3. Meanwhile, the No doctor, Howard Conter does not appear to have any any relevant publications or appointments.

News stories like this are important. They get people to think about how healthcare is delivered in Canada, and how that can be reformed. It’s a pity that the story took the form of “she said, he said” instead of dipping into the empirical studies behind the editorial.

4 Responses to “Bad Journalism”

  1. 2008.Nov.08 @ 12:44

    This would be your “both sides of the issue” journalism. No doubt there are a spectrum of opinions on this not well covered by yes/no. Do other countries require recertification, etc. But this would require work, and journalism is deadline driven.

    This style of journalism shows up even more on political issues where ‘news’ shows put up political party operatives or their think tank proxies to argue the sides on behalf of their parties. But what about experts without any particular ideological bent? Don’t see them much.

  • 2008.Nov.09 @ 22:59

    But what about experts without any particular ideological bent?

    They don’t have the same machinery behind them. I imagine the life of an independent pundit would involve a lot of self promotion.

  • 2008.Nov.12 @ 15:01

    The CBC article reads to me like the journalist called up some doctors and asked their opinion. This particular doctor gave the “other side of the story” answer and so got published. I wouldn’t necessary call this article “bad” journalism. Lazy? Yes. Not very well written? Definitely. My guess, it got handed to a relatively junior reporter, who knows little about health care issues and was on a tight deadline.

  • 2008.Nov.12 @ 23:02

    bg: The two things about the article that stick in my craw are Dr Conter’s apparent lack of any relevant knowledge (who the hell is he? what information does he have that refutes Dr Levinson’s editorial?); and the out-and-out refute of Conter’s comment in the editorial.

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