Page 12 - OctSam2019
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CORPORATE
            MEDICINE



        continued from page 11

        much control over the doctor. Specifically, the corporation col-
        lected two thirds of the revenue, controlled the staff who
        worked with the doctors and commercialized the doctors’ li-
        cense to obtain various health care contracts.  The more strings
        and limits to the agreement, the greater the risk it will be illegal.
          There are several other notable exceptions which allow an
        unlicensed entity to employ a physician. They include certain
        non-profit  health  care  corporations,  non-profit  medical
        schools, various State and County institutions/organizations,
        including certain hospital districts and certain rural hospitals.
          The penalties for violating this legal doctrine in Texas are
        pretty hefty. An offending party may get off with an adminis-
        trative fine. but a doctor could also lose his license if the cir-
        cumstances were sufficiently egregious. Worse yet, criminal
        penalties are at least a theoretical possibility even though the
        author has been unable to locate any imprisoned doctor for
        becoming a party to an unlawful agreement. However, that
        doesn’t mean it can’t or won’t happen.

        What’s the take home message here?
          Any time you’re asked to sign a contract or enter into some
        agreement involving lay people and your practice, you need to
        be on at least a low level alert. When it involves any form of
        compensation to you, or takes some percentage of your fee
        ostensibly for some service or product, the alert level goes
        from low to high. We’re not just talking about something that
        may look a little bit like an employment agreement. You need
        to take a hard look at things like practice management agree-
        ments, leases of real estate and equipment, franchise agree-
        ments or anything by which an unlicensed person may be
        entitled to a portion of your fee or may have some way, direct
        or indirect, to control your judgment.
          Crafty lawyers get big bucks trying to imagine creative agree-
        ments to avoid the corporate practice of medicine doctrine.
        At day’s end, the courts will always put substance over form.
        because your license could be at stake, don’t play lawyer in an
        effort to determine the legality of the proposal at hand. Find
        somebody who knows these laws and get a professional opin-
        ion first. Your job, and the purpose of this article, is simply to
        have enough knowledge to be aware of the warning signs and
        symptoms that should trigger an alert.

          George F. “Rick” Evans Jr. is a founding partner of  Evans, Rowe
        & Holbrook. A graduate of  Marshall College of  Law, his practice for
        36 years has been exclusively dedicated to representation of  physicians
        and other healthcare providers. Mr. Evans is the BCMS general counsel.


         12  San Antonio Medicine   •  October  2019
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