February 6, 2025

QUESTION:
There is a private subreddit discussion group in which only Medical Staff professionals are approved to participate.  Most members of the group seek advice on credentialing, privileging, and peer review issues.  Community guidelines within the group caution against identifying the practitioners involved in their questions.  However, some posts may include specific details about problematic credentialing files or behavior incidents.  In some instances, individuals who post questions may include information such as their name and the hospital at which they work.  A few of our leaders are wondering if joining this group would help to bounce ideas off other Medical Staffs and their leaders.  Is this problematic?

ANSWER FROM HORTYSPRINGER ATTORNEY MARY PATERNI:
While we don’t mean to discourage professional interactions among Medical Staff professionals, there are legal risks to discussing credentialing and peer review issues about individual practitioners on social media.

Let’s be real, it’s social media.  There is never any guarantee that anything posted on platforms like Reddit, Facebook, or Instagram will remain private, even if a group is “closed.”  A member of the group could have a reason for disclosing information outside the group.  All it takes is a screen shot or copy + paste.  Plus, efforts to “de-identify” information do not always work.  Even the smallest bits of supposedly de-identified information can sometimes be pieced together and become identifiable.

There are a variety of legal risks if a post about credentialing or peer review matter gets back to the practitioner who is the subject of the post.  First, the practitioner could claim that the post was defamatory because it disclosed unfavorable information in a public setting.  Also, the practitioner could argue that the post constituted a breach of the confidentiality obligations set forth in the Medical Staff Bylaws, “tortiously interfered” with his employment prospects, or constituted a “breach of contract” under state law.

Social media posts could be problematic even if they are disclosed to individuals other than the practitioner in question.  For example, plaintiffs’ attorneys could use such posts as a reason to look for problems at a hospital.  Also, attorneys representing plaintiffs in malpractice or negligent credentialing cases could argue that the disclosure of peer review information on social media resulted in a waiver of the peer review privilege under state law of any information related to that matter.

So, we want to be careful here.  Again, we don’t mean to discourage professional interactions among Medical Staff professionals.  There are certainly many topics that could be discussed that don’t raise the potential problems discussed above.  However, recognize that there are risks to disclosing practitioner-specific information on social media.

If you have a quick question about this, e-mail Mary Paterni at mpaterni@hortyspringer.com.