March 17, 2016

QUESTION:        Occasionally, a physician on our medical staff will want to treat a family member.   Medical staff leadership does not think this is a good idea, but we have not expressly addressed this in any of our documents.  If we allow it, can the physician bill for the services he provides to a family member?

ANSWER:           The American Medical Association (“AMA”) has taken a strong stance against the treatment of family members by a physician.  The AMA’s Opinions on Practice Matters, E-8.19 Self?Treatment or Treatment of Immediate Family Members, includes the following statement:

Physicians generally should not treat themselves or members of their immediate families. Professional objectivity may be compromised when an immediate family member … is the patient; the physician’s personal feelings may unduly influence his or her professional medical judgment, thereby interfering with the care being delivered. Physicians may fail to probe sensitive areas when taking the medical history or may fail to perform intimate parts of the physical examination. Similarly, patients may feel uncomfortable disclosing sensitive information or undergoing an intimate examination when the physician is an immediate family member…. If tensions develop in a physician’s professional relationship with a family member, perhaps as a result of a negative medical outcome, such difficulties may be carried over into the family member’s personal relationship with the physician….

Since this issue has come up, or even if it hasn’t, we recommend that you add language to your rules and regulations to address it.

With respect to your second question, it is important for physicians to know that they cannot bill Medicare for services provided to family members. Medicare policy clearly states that the treatment of certain family members is not to be reimbursed by Medicare or any Medicare Advantage program.  The following relationships are included in the definition of family members:

  • Husband and wife;
  • Natural or adoptive parent, child, and sibling;
  • Stepparent, stepchild, stepbrother, and stepsister;
  • Father-in-law, mother-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, brother-in-law, and sister-in-law;
  • Grandparent and grandchild; and
  • Spouse of grandparent and grandchild.

While this is a Medicare policy, many other insurance companies have adopted this as part of their contractual policies with providers.