Medical boards are the state entities that regulate the practice of medicine in each state, and grant or revoke medical licenses. While state medical boards traditionally are limited to protecting the quality of care for patients, increasingly state medical boards are acting on behalf of insurance companies who want to reduce their payments to physicians.
These states have laws or policies preventing medical boards from taking action based on fees charged by physicians:
Most federal Courts of Appeals have found that medical board examiners have judicial immunity from suits brought against them for their conduct in license suspension proceedings:
A decision rejecting judicial immunity for a summary suspension of a license is DiBlasio v. Novello, 344 F.3d 292 (2d Cir. 2003).
Categories: [Medicine] [Judicial Immunity]