A groundbreaking investigation into physician misconduct within Canada has unveiled significant lapses in the oversight and disciplinary mechanisms applied to cases involving sexual or gender-based violence, harassment, and discrimination. The comprehensive study, recently published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ), methodically analyzed publicly accessible information from diverse sources including media reports, judicial rulings, and physician regulatory authority records. This robust content analysis encompassed 208 physicians implicated in misconduct incidents from 2019 through early 2024, revealing a complex and alarming landscape of professional violations that demand renewed scrutiny.
Data extracted from this multi-source approach identified an alarming total of 689 victims connected to reported cases. The demographic breakdown notably illuminated the gender and age dimensions of the crisis — an overwhelming majority of victims, approximately 585 individuals, were women or girls, alongside no fewer than 40 identified children. The predominance of cases related to sexual-boundary infractions or misconduct constituted about 36% of the complaints, closely followed by allegations of sexual assault accounting for roughly 32%. The study flagged definitional discrepancies that complicate uniform classification, underscoring the nuanced nature of the behaviors assessed and the challenges regulators face in establishing standard monitoring protocols across jurisdictions.
One of the most disconcerting revelations was the inconsistency in disciplinary reporting by Canadian medical colleges. Instances were found where complaints documented in external media or legal cases were conspicuously absent from official physician college disciplinary registries, highlighting systemic opacity in regulatory processes. This lack of comprehensive public disclosure engenders substantial limitations in evaluating the effectiveness of current remediation and monitoring strategies, impeding efforts to safeguard patients and uphold professional integrity within medical practice.
Dr. Shannon Ruzycki, affiliated with the Cumming School of Medicine at the University of Calgary and lead author on the study, articulated concerns regarding the inadequacies of data management by regulatory bodies. The findings indicate a troubling deficit in accessible, transparent, and systematically reported data on physicians implicated in sex- and gender-based misconduct. Such informational voids restrict the healthcare sector’s capacity to rigorously assess and reform disciplinary frameworks designed to curtail these toxic behaviors and prevent recidivism.
The research further quantified recidivism rates, estimating that approximately 30% of the physicians studied were implicated in repeated instances of misconduct. This prevalence aligns closely with parallel findings from the United States, signaling an entrenched pattern across North American medical contexts. Repeat offenses emphasize the critical need for robust, evidence-based intervention strategies that extend beyond initial sanctions to effectively disrupt cycles of abuse and restore public trust in medical practitioners.
Recommendations emerging from the study advocate for enhanced public engagement in regulatory reporting, proposing that inclusivity and transparency serve as pillars for protecting community welfare while simultaneously respecting the privacy rights of physicians. The approach calls for a delicate balance between accountability and due process, emphasizing that accusations of sexual or gender-based misconduct carry profound repercussions for all parties involved and must be handled with the utmost fairness and confidentiality.
A promising initiative suggested involves the establishment of a national registry that catalogues misconduct incidents with detailed explanations, outcomes, and resultant disciplinary measures. Such a centralized database would serve as an invaluable resource for stakeholders, enabling systematic tracking of behavioral patterns, informing policy development, and fostering a culture of zero tolerance toward sexual and gender-based violations within healthcare environments.
The editorial contribution by Dr. Kirsten Patrick, editor-in-chief of CMAJ, contextualizes the study’s findings within broader systemic challenges facing Canadian medicine’s leadership and regulatory entities. Dr. Patrick highlights an ongoing reluctance within professional spheres to fully confront and disclose the extent of sex- and gender-based misconduct perpetrated by physicians, thereby perpetuating a culture of concealment rather than accountability. This editorial insistently calls for a transformative shift toward openness and justice.
Notably, the study did identify a notable gap concerning the prevalence of victims who are themselves physicians or other health professionals, a finding that contrasts with recent surveys from the United Kingdom and the United States. Those surveys report extraordinarily high rates—upwards of 65% among women and 23% among men—of sex- and gender-based harassment experienced within clinical training and practice settings. Canadian data similarly suggest high incidences of interprofessional misconduct, illuminating the pervasive nature of the problem across different healthcare hierarchies and specialties.
Dr. Patrick’s commentary stresses the urgency for the Canadian medical profession to confront these endemic issues head-on. The profession must institute systemic reforms encapsulating cultural change, transparent acknowledgment of failures, and assertive modification of regulatory and academic standards. Central to this evolution is the prioritization of victim support, offender remediation, and the establishment of enforceable behavioral standards that unequivocally reject sex- and gender-based discrimination, harassment, and assault.
Achieving this transformation entails a coordinated effort among educational institutions, regulatory bodies, professional associations, and policymakers to dismantle entrenched barriers to reporting and redress. Embedding accountability and transparency in medical governance structures will be imperative to cultivating a clinical environment that respects dignity, safety, and equity for all healthcare workers and patients alike.
As such, the study’s revelations serve as a clarion call for immediate action to reform existing frameworks governing physician conduct. By implementing rigorous monitoring systems, fostering public participation in oversight processes, and committing to cultural shifts within the medical profession, Canada can lead the way toward meaningful eradication of sexual and gender-based misconduct in healthcare, ultimately safeguarding the welfare of individuals and enhancing the integrity of medical practice nationwide.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Physician respondents in sexual misconduct concerns in Canada: a comparative case analysis using publicly available information
News Publication Date: 20-Apr-2026
Web References: https://www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.251179
Keywords: Sexual harassment, Health care, Harassment, Aggression, Doctor patient relationship

