Review Article

Medical Education on Provider-Patient Power Dynamics: A Review of the Literature on Training for Responding to Patient Reports of Physician Misconduct

Volume: 2 Number: 3 December 25, 2025

Medical Education on Provider-Patient Power Dynamics: A Review of the Literature on Training for Responding to Patient Reports of Physician Misconduct

Abstract

Objective: Patients’ ability to report physician misconduct is essential for accountability, patient safety, and ethical healthcare delivery. However, entrenched power imbalances between providers and patients (reinforced by medical hierarchies, hidden curricula, and inconsistent institutional support) often hinder open dialog and ethical responsiveness. Medical trainees are frequently ill equipped to navigate these complex dynamics, particularly when confronted with patient complaints or observed misconduct. This review synthesizes the literature on how undergraduate and postgraduate medical education addresses provider–patient power dynamics, with a specific focus on preparing students to respond ethically and effectively to patient reports of physician misconduct. Methods: A structured literature search was conducted across PubMed, MEDLINE, and ERIC via terms related to medical education, power dynamics, physician‒patient relationships, misconduct, hidden curricula, and patient‒centered care. The inclusion criteria focused on peer-reviewed studies from 2000–2024 that addressed educational content related to professionalism, ethical training, communication, and error disclosure in UME or PGME settings. Among the 1,269 records identified, 29 met the inclusion criteria and were synthesized thematically. Results: Three overarching themes emerged: (1) structural and cultural barriers to addressing power—including the hidden curriculum, hierarchical silencing, and systemic inequities; (2) emotional and ethical learning—highlighting the need for curricula in emotional intelligence, moral courage, and reflective practice; and (3) curricular gaps and interventions—identifying promising but fragmented efforts such as boundary education, empathy training, and error disclosure programs. However, these initiatives are often inconsistently applied and insufficiently integrated into core curricula. Conclusion: Medical education insufficiently prepares learners to manage provider–patient power imbalances and respond to patient complaints of physician misconduct. Addressing this gap requires coordinated reforms that embed emotional and ethical competencies, structural competency, and patient-centered communication throughout training. Without such reform, future physicians risk perpetuating a culture of silence, undermining trust, and failing to meet the ethical demands of contemporary medical practice.

Keywords

References

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Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Medical Education

Journal Section

Review Article

Publication Date

December 25, 2025

Submission Date

April 13, 2025

Acceptance Date

October 17, 2025

Published in Issue

Year 2025 Volume: 2 Number: 3

APA
Quon, S., Low, S., Zhou, S., & Zheng, K. (2025). Medical Education on Provider-Patient Power Dynamics: A Review of the Literature on Training for Responding to Patient Reports of Physician Misconduct. Journal of Medical Education and Family Medicine, 2(3), 108-117. https://doi.org/10.62425/jmefm.1675115
AMA
1.Quon S, Low S, Zhou S, Zheng K. Medical Education on Provider-Patient Power Dynamics: A Review of the Literature on Training for Responding to Patient Reports of Physician Misconduct. J Med Educ Family Med. 2025;2(3):108-117. doi:10.62425/jmefm.1675115
Chicago
Quon, Stephanie, Sarah Low, Sarah Zhou, and Katherine Zheng. 2025. “Medical Education on Provider-Patient Power Dynamics: A Review of the Literature on Training for Responding to Patient Reports of Physician Misconduct”. Journal of Medical Education and Family Medicine 2 (3): 108-17. https://doi.org/10.62425/jmefm.1675115.
EndNote
Quon S, Low S, Zhou S, Zheng K (December 1, 2025) Medical Education on Provider-Patient Power Dynamics: A Review of the Literature on Training for Responding to Patient Reports of Physician Misconduct. Journal of Medical Education and Family Medicine 2 3 108–117.
IEEE
[1]S. Quon, S. Low, S. Zhou, and K. Zheng, “Medical Education on Provider-Patient Power Dynamics: A Review of the Literature on Training for Responding to Patient Reports of Physician Misconduct”, J Med Educ Family Med, vol. 2, no. 3, pp. 108–117, Dec. 2025, doi: 10.62425/jmefm.1675115.
ISNAD
Quon, Stephanie - Low, Sarah - Zhou, Sarah - Zheng, Katherine. “Medical Education on Provider-Patient Power Dynamics: A Review of the Literature on Training for Responding to Patient Reports of Physician Misconduct”. Journal of Medical Education and Family Medicine 2/3 (December 1, 2025): 108-117. https://doi.org/10.62425/jmefm.1675115.
JAMA
1.Quon S, Low S, Zhou S, Zheng K. Medical Education on Provider-Patient Power Dynamics: A Review of the Literature on Training for Responding to Patient Reports of Physician Misconduct. J Med Educ Family Med. 2025;2:108–117.
MLA
Quon, Stephanie, et al. “Medical Education on Provider-Patient Power Dynamics: A Review of the Literature on Training for Responding to Patient Reports of Physician Misconduct”. Journal of Medical Education and Family Medicine, vol. 2, no. 3, Dec. 2025, pp. 108-17, doi:10.62425/jmefm.1675115.
Vancouver
1.Stephanie Quon, Sarah Low, Sarah Zhou, Katherine Zheng. Medical Education on Provider-Patient Power Dynamics: A Review of the Literature on Training for Responding to Patient Reports of Physician Misconduct. J Med Educ Family Med. 2025 Dec. 1;2(3):108-17. doi:10.62425/jmefm.1675115

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