# Health conditions that impact fitness-to-practice in physicians: a scoping review

**Authors:** Richard Roberts, Tanya Jackson, Ryan Gerdes, Danika Deibert, Liz Dennett, Ellina Lytvyak, Sebastian Straube

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/intqhc/mzaf108 · International Journal for Quality in Health Care · 2025-10-07

## TL;DR

This review identifies health conditions that may affect physicians' ability to practice safely, highlighting mental health and substance use as major concerns.

## Contribution

The study comprehensively enumerates health conditions impacting physician fitness-to-practice, providing a standardized framework for regulatory use.

## Key findings

- Mental health issues and substance use were the most frequently reported conditions affecting physician fitness-to-practice.
- Over 200 distinct health conditions were identified across 403 eligible studies.
- The findings emphasize the need for regulatory clarity and standardized processes in physician health programs.

## Abstract

It has been over 50 years since health conditions in physicians were first suggested to affect their fitness-to-practice, with consequent impacts on patient safety and patient care. Recent policy positions from physician regulatory bodies express a desire for clarity regarding the impact of these health conditions alongside their standardization in physician regulatory processes. Furthermore, these conditions have not been fully enumerated. Therefore, this scoping review intended to find all health conditions which were identified in the literature to impact physician fitness-to-practice.

A specialist librarian developed and executed a systematic literature search in Ovid MEDLINE, Embase via Ovid, APA PsycINFO, and ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global (to January 2024). The SPIDER framework was used for inclusion criteria and records were screened independently by two reviewers by title and abstract, and then by full text. Any study addressing a health condition identified as able to affect fitness-to-practice in physicians and surgeons, physician assistants, or medical trainees was eligible.

In 403 eligible records of 2542 screened, 4336 total mentions of 203 fitness-to-practice-related health conditions were identified. Conditions relating to mental health issues (32.0%) and drug/substance use (26.0%) comprised more than half of the condition reports. This was followed by neurological conditions (13.2%), medical conditions (12.8%), alcohol use (6.0%), addiction (3.0%), and aging (2.9%) as well as conditions affecting dexterity/fine motor skills/psychomotor performance (2.1%), vision (1.4%), and hearing (0.6%).

This scoping review identified a wide variety of health conditions which could affect physician fitness-to-practice, with a potential impact on patient care and safety. These conditions have persisted in the literature, and we commend them to the attention of practicing physicians, researchers, regulators, and physician health programs.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** addiction (MESH:D019966), Conditions (MESH:D020763), drug (MESH:D000081015)
- **Chemicals:** alcohol (MESH:D000438)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

24 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12596707/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12596707