Mileikowsky v. West Hills Hospital & Medical Center

Opinion

WERDEGAR, J.

California's statutory peer review process, Business and Professions Code section 809 et seq., provides a physician with the right to a hearing for the purpose of reviewing a hospital peer review committee’s recommendation to deny the physician’s application for reappointment to staff privileges. A hearing officer may be appointed to preside at the hearing, but the officer is prohibited by statute from acting as a prosecutor or advocate or from voting on the merits. (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 809.2, subd. (b).)1 The merits are determined by the trier of fact, often a panel drawn from other of the physician’s peers. (Id., subd. (a).) We conclude the hearing officer lacks authority to prevent a reviewing panel from reviewing the case by dismissing it on his or her own initiative before the hearing has been convened, and also lacks authority to terminate the hearing after it has been convened without first securing the approval of the reviewing panel. We therefore will affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal.

BACKGROUND

Dr. Gil N. Mileikowsky is a physician and surgeon board certified in obstetrics and gynecology. He had staff privileges to practice gynecology at *1265West Hills Hospital and Medical Center (West Hills), an acute care facility. In May 2001, Dr. Mileikowsky applied for obstetrical privileges at West Hills and for renewal of his gynecological privileges. His applications were reviewed by a peer review committee, which recommended denial. The recommendation was submitted to West Hills’s medical executive committee, which also recommended denial. Dr. Mileikowsky was given formal notice of the recommendation and the reasons for it; (1) he had failed to notify the medical staff that his privileges at another facility, Century City Hospital, had been terminated; (2) he had represented that he had voluntarily resigned from a third facility, the Encino-Tarzana Regional Medical Center, when in fact he had been summarily suspended;2 and (3) he had attended a patient at West Hills and attempted to perform a caesarean section on her when he lacked obstetrical privileges and the patient had requested he stay away.

On May 23, 2002, Dr. Mileikowsky filed a timely request for a hearing, challenging the peer review committee’s recommendation. Under West Hills’s bylaws, hearings are held before a judicial review committee composed of members of the active staff (the reviewing panel). West Hills’s medical executive committee appointed a hearing officer to preside over the hearing. The bylaws specify that hearings are to be held, if possible, no later than 45 days from the date a request for a hearing is received. In Dr. Mileikowsky’s case, however, month after month went by without a hearing, largely because Dr. Mileikowsky refused to produce documents requested by West Hills, challenged the hearing officer’s authority, and refused to comply with the officer’s directions or orders. West Hills in the meantime amended its notice of the recommendation to include an allegation that Dr. Mileikowsky had failed to cooperate in West Hills’s investigation of the actions taken against him by a fourth facility, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. The amended notice referred to a report Cedars-Sinai had made to the Medical Board of California (Medical Board) and to the National Practitioner Data Bank, indicating Dr. Mileikowsky’s privileges at that facility had been suspended for actions falling into the adverse action classification of “Incompetence/Malpractice/Negligence.”

On February 5, 2003, after detailing the many complaints the parties had made about one another, including West Hills’s complaint that Dr. Mileikowsky persistently refused to provide information relating to the action taken against him by Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, the hearing officer ordered Dr. Mileikowsky to produce the Cedars-Sinai documents, warning he would impose terminating sanctions should Dr. Mileikowsky fail to comply. Dr. Mileikowsky replied he would be occupied until March 14 with “other *1266matters” and would respond to the officer’s order after that date. On March 18, 2003, the hearing officer wrote to the parties that he had received no further communication from Dr. Mileikowsky, ordered Dr. Mileikowsky to make arrangements to allow inspection and copying of the Cedars-Sinai documents by March 24, and again warned he would order terminating sanctions if Dr. Mileikowsky failed to comply.

Dr. Mileikowsky did not comply with the hearing officer’s order. On March 27, 2003, the hearing officer issued an order dismissing Dr. Mileikowsky’s request for a hearing, finding Dr. Mileikowsky’s refusal to make the documents available prevented West Hills from prosecuting its case. In dismissing the proceedings, the officer invoked a provision in West Hills’s bylaws providing that a physician who fails to request a hearing shall be deemed to have accepted the action involved, the action will become effective immediately, and the physician will be deemed to have waived all other rights inuring to him or her under the bylaws. The order thus declared that the dismissal constituted Dr. Mileikowsky’s voluntary acceptance of the peer review committee’s recommendation and that the recommendation therefore “shall become effective immediately.” As a result of the order, no hearing was convened, and the matter was never submitted to the reviewing panel for decision.3

Dr. Mileikowsky appealed the order to West Hills’s governing board. The board adopted the hearing officer’s order, ruling Dr. Mileikowsky had been afforded a fair hearing in substantial compliance with the bylaws and that the officer’s decision to dismiss the proceedings was reasonable, warranted, and supported by the weight of the evidence. Dr. Mileikowsky sought relief in the superior court by petition for a writ of administrative mandate. The superior court denied the petition. The Court of Appeal reversed, remanding the matter to the trial court with directions to enter a judgment directing West Hills and its medical staff (1) to set aside the governing board’s decision, (2) to convene a hearing under the provisions of subdivision (c) of section 809.1, and (3) to conduct the hearing and any further proceedings in accordance with the provisions of section 809.2 et seq.

*1267DISCUSSION

I.

Decisions concerning medical staff membership and privileges are made through a process of hospital peer review. Every licensed hospital is required to have an organized medical staff responsible for the adequacy and quality of the medical care rendered to patients in the hospital. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 22, § 70703, subd. (a); Arnett v. Dal Cielo (1996) 14 Cal.4th 4, 10 [56 Cal.Rptr.2d 706, 923 P.2d 1].) The medical staff must adopt written bylaws “which provide formal procedures for the evaluation of staff applications and credentials, appointments, reappointments, assignment of clinical privileges, appeals mechanisms and such other subjects or conditions which the medical staff and governing body deem appropriate.” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 22, § 70703, subd. (b); see Bus. & Prof. Code, § 2282.5; Cal. Code Regs., tit. 22, §§ 70701, 70703.) The medical staff acts chiefly through peer review committees, which, among other things, investigate complaints about physicians and recommend whether staff privileges should be granted or renewed. (Arnett, at p. 10.) In 1989, California codified the peer review process at Business and Professions Code section 809 et seq., making it part of a comprehensive statutory scheme for the licensure of California physicians and requiring acute care facilities such as West Hills to include the process in their medical staff bylaws. (§ 809, subd. (a)(8).)

The primary purpose of the peer review process is to protect the health and welfare of the people of California by excluding through the peer review mechanism “those healing arts practitioners who provide substandard care or who engage in professional misconduct.” (§ 809, subd. (a)(6).) This purpose also serves the interest of California’s acute care facilities by providing a means of removing incompetent physicians from a hospital’s staff to reduce exposure to possible malpractice liability. (Kibler v. Northern Inyo County Local Hospital Dist. (2006) 39 Cal.4th 192, 199 [46 Cal.Rptr.3d 41, 138 P.3d 193]; Arnett v. Dal Cielo, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 12.)

Another purpose, also if not equally important, is to protect competent practitioners from being barred from practice for arbitrary or discriminatory reasons. Thus, section 809 recites: “Peer review, fairly conducted, is essential to preserving the highest standards of medical practice” (id., subd. (a)(3)), but “[p]eer review that is not conducted fairly results in harm both to patients and healing arts practitioners by limiting access to care” (id., subd. (a)(4)). Peer review that is not conducted fairly and results in the unwarranted loss of a qualified physician’s right or privilege to use a hospital’s facilities deprives the physician of a property interest directly connected to the physician’s livelihood. (Anton v. San Antonio Community Hosp. (1977) 19 Cal.3d 802, 823 *1268[140 Cal.Rptr. 442, 567 P.2d 1162].) As one author stated: “It is almost impossible for a physician to practice medicine today unless she is a medical staff member at one or more hospitals. This is because a doctor cannot regularly admit or treat patients unless she is a member of the medical staff. Privileges are especially important for specialists, like surgeons, who perform the majority of their services in a hospital setting. For this reason, a hospital’s decision to deny membership or clinical privileges, or to discipline a physician, can have an immediate and devastating effect on a practitioner’s career.” (Merkel, Physicians Policing Physicians: The Development of Medical Staff Peer Review Law at California Hospitals (2004) 38 U.S.F. L.Rev. 301, 302-303.)

The effect of denying staff privileges extends beyond reducing or eliminating a physician’s access to the denying facility. Section 805, subdivision (b) requires that hospitals report certain disciplinary actions, including denials of staff privileges, to the Medical Board. The Medical Board, which licenses physicians, must maintain a historical record that includes any reports of disciplinary information. (§ 800, subd. (a)(4); see Arnett v. Dal Cielo, supra, 14 Cal.4th at p. 11.) A hospital considering whether to grant or renew a physician’s staff privileges must contact the Medical Board to learn if some other facility has reported a disciplinary action involving the physician. (§ 805.5, subd. (a).) And, as occurred here, a hospital usually is required to report disciplinary actions to the National Practitioner Data Bank, established for the purpose of tracking the activities of incompetent physicians. (42 U.S.C. § 11133(a).)4 A hospital’s decision to deny staff privileges therefore may have the effect of ending the physician’s career.

The peer review process, while generally delegating responsibility to the private sector to monitor the professional conduct of physicians, establishes minimum protections for physicians subject to adverse action in the peer review system. (Kibler v. Northern Inyo County Local Hospital Dist., supra, 39 Cal.4th at p. 201; Smith v. Selma Community Hospital (2008) 164 Cal.App.4th 1478, 1484 [80 Cal.Rptr.3d 745].) Where, as here, a peer review committee recommends a “final proposed action” that will require a hospital to file a report with the Medical Board, the affected physician is entitled to notice and may request a hearing for the purpose of determining if the *1269recommendation is reasonable and warranted. (§§ 809.1, subds. (a), (b), 809.3, subd. (b)(1), (2) & (3).) “The hearing shall be held, as determined by the peer review body, before a trier of fact, which shall be an arbitrator or arbitrators selected by a process mutually acceptable to the licentiate [i.e., the physician] and the peer review body, or before a panel of unbiased individuals . . . which shall include, where feasible, an individual practicing the same specialty as the licentiate.” (§ 809.2, subd. (a).) At the hearing, both parties have the right to call, examine, and cross-examine witnesses and to present and rebut evidence. (§ 809.3, subd. (a)(3), (4).) Upon the completion of the hearing, the parties are entitled to the written decision of the trier of fact, “including findings of fact and a conclusion articulating the connection between the evidence produced at the hearing and the decision reached.” (§ 809.4, subd. (a)(1).) Under West Hills’s bylaws, the reviewing panel is composed of no fewer than five members of the medical staff. A physician therefore has the right to have a second body of peers independently determine whether a peer review committee’s recommendation to deny the physician’s application for privileges is reasonable and warranted after considering not only the evidence that led to the peer review committee’s findings, but also any additional evidence produced at the hearing.

II.

Both the Business and Professions Code and West Hills’s bylaws provide for the appointment of a hearing officer, but both also carefully limit the authority of the officer. If a physician requests a hearing, the code provides that the medical executive committee may, but need not, select a hearing officer to preside over the hearing to be held before the reviewing panel. (§ 809.2, subd. (b).) West Hills’s bylaws confer authority on the officer to maintain decorum at the hearing and ensure that all parties have a reasonable opportunity to be heard and to present oral and documentary evidence. Both the statutory scheme and West Hills’s bylaws caution that the hearing officer is not to act as a prosecuting officer or advocate, and both recite that the hearing officer “shall not be entitled to vote.” (§ 809.2, subd. (b).) The reviewing panel resolves any conflicts in the evidence, determines its sufficiency, and determines the reasonableness of the recommended disciplinary action.

A hearing officer without the authority to determine sufficiency of the evidence may not entertain a motion to dismiss the proceedings for lack of evidence. (See Frost v. State Personnel Board (1961) 190 Cal.App.2d 1, 3-7 [11 Cal.Rptr. 718].) Here, while the hearing officer did not dismiss the proceedings for lack of evidence, by dismissing the proceedings before the hearing was convened the officer prevented the reviewing panel from considering the evidence and eliminated the reviewing panel’s role in the decision-making process. Whether the hearing officer had the power to take such *1270action presents a question of law which we review de novo. (Mileikowsky v. Tenet Healthsystem, supra, 128 Cal.App.4th at p. 555; Unnamed Physician v. Board of Trustees (2001) 93 Cal.App.4th 607, 618-619 [113 Cal.Rptr.2d 309]; Rosenblit v. Superior Court (1991) 231 Cal.App.3d 1434, 1442-1444 [282 Cal.Rptr. 819].)

No provision in either the Business and Professions Code or West Hills’s bylaws expressly confers authority on a hearing officer to issue terminating sanctions. West Hills, however, contends such authority is implicit in section 809.2, subdivision (d). That subdivision grants each party the right to inspect and copy relevant documentary information in the other party’s possession. It then provides: “The failure by either party to provide access to this information at least 30 days before the hearing shall constitute good cause for a continuance. The right to inspect and copy by either party does not extend to confidential information referring solely to individually identifiable licentiates, other than the licentiate under review. The arbitrator or presiding officer shall consider and rule upon any request for access to information, and may impose any safeguards the protection of the peer review process and justice requires.” (§ 809.2, subd. (d).)

In West Hills’s view, a hearing officer’s power to impose safeguards to protect the peer review process embraces the authority to issue terminating sanctions for a party’s failure to comply with requests for information. But that the Legislature intended for section 809.2, subdivision (d) to confer on the hearing officer the power to impose sanctions beyond granting or denying continuances is dubious. After generally stating the right of each party to have access to information in the other party’s possession, subdivision (d) addresses two situations. The first is that a party might fail to provide access to information. After identifying that possibility, subdivision (d) states that the failure to provide timely access “shall constitute good cause for a continuance.” The second is that a document might contain confidential information relating to someone who is not a party to the proceedings. After identifying that possibility, subdivision (d) confers authority on the hearing officer to “rule upon any request for access to information, [and to] impose any safeguards the protection of the peer review process and justice requires.” Read in context, the provision for imposing safeguards clearly seems directed to the situation in which the material a physician requests to inspect or copy includes confidential information related to physicians who are not parties to the proceedings; in that case, the statute authorizes the hearing officer to redact or otherwise limit the information to protect the confidentiality of the nonparty physicians while still protecting “the peer review process and justice” by providing the physician access to otherwise discoverable material.

While the statutory language seems clear, a broad interpretation of the officer’s statutory powers might nonetheless be justified if granting the *1271hearing officer authority to issue terminating sanctions were consistent with the goals of the statutory review process and its allocation of responsibilities for reviewing a peer review committee’s recommendation. But it is not. The purpose of providing a physician with a review of the peer review committee’s recommendation is to secure for the physician an independent review of that recommendation by a qualified person or entity, here the reviewing panel. That purpose is defeated if the matter is dismissed before the reviewing panel becomes involved. Further, irrespective of a hearing officer’s authority at the hearing or over the evidence adduced there, the officer, who “shall not be entitled to vote” (§ 809.2, subd. (b)), has no part in the decisionmaking process and no authority to prevent the reviewing panel from reviewing the recommendation. Yet, in effect, a hearing officer who prevents the reviewing panel from conducting its review “votes” by ensuring that the peer review committee’s recommendation will be the final decision.

A physician’s refusal to cooperate in an investigation of reported problems may support a recommendation that the physician’s staff privileges be denied. (See Webman v. Little Co. of Mary Hospital (1995) 39 Cal.App.4th 592, 602-603 [46 Cal.Rptr.2d 90],)5 However, it also is settled that a physician may not be denied staff privileges merely because he or she is argumentative or has difficulty getting along with other physicians or hospital staff, when those traits do not relate to the quality of medical care the physician is able to provide. (Miller v. Eisenhower Medical Center (1980) 27 Cal.3d 614, 627-629 [166 Cal.Rptr. 826, 614 P.2d 258]; Rosner v. Eden Township Hospital Dist. (1962) 58 Cal.2d 592, 598 [25 Cal.Rptr. 551, 375 P.2d 431].) For similar reasons, a physician’s obstructiveness in connection with the reviewing process might, but will not necessarily, support a conclusion the physician is unable to function in a hospital setting. As it is the reviewing panel and not the hearing officer that determines whether the peer review committee’s recommendation is warranted, it is the reviewing panel that should decide whether or not the physician’s inability or refusal to engage in the reviewing process suffices to render any further proceedings unnecessary.

*1272We hold, therefore, that the hearing officer lacked authority to prevent the reviewing panel from fulfilling its statutory duty to review the peer review committee’s recommendation to deny Dr. Mileikowsky’s applications.6

III.

The error was not in any way cured by Dr. Mileikowsky’s subsequent appeal to West Hills’s governing board and the board’s affirmation of the hearing officer’s order. Hospitals have a dual structure. The administrative governing body, which might not include health care professionals, takes ultimate responsibility for the quality and performance of the hospital. The hospital’s medical staff evaluates staff applications and credentials, appointments, reappointments, and assignments of clinical privileges. (Alexander v. Superior Court (1993) 5 Cal.4th 1218, 1224 [23 Cal.Rptr.2d 397, 859 P.2d 96].) It is not inconceivable a governing body would wish to remove a physician from a hospital staff for reasons having no bearing on quality of care. In Smith v. Selma Community Hospital, supra, 164 Cal.App.4th 1478, for example, there was evidence suggesting a hospital’s governing board might have sought to terminate a physician’s privileges because the physician owned and operated clinics that competed with the hospital’s corporate owner, or because of a lawsuit between the physician and the corporate owner arising from the owner’s failed attempt to purchase the physician’s clinics. (Id. at pp. 1489-1490, 1512-1513, 1517.) Accordingly, although a hospital’s administrative governing body makes the ultimate decision about whether to grant or deny staff privileges, it does so based on the recommendation of its medical staff committee (Alexander, at pp. 1218, 1224), giving “great weight to the actions of peer review bodies . . .” (§ 809.05, subd. (a)). Here, the board gave no weight to the actions of any peer review body. It simply affirmed the hearing officer’s order on its finding that Dr. Mileikowsky’s prehearing conduct justified termination of the proceedings. This procedure violated both the letter and the underlying principles of the statutory peer review process.

IV.

We are not unmindful of the burdens the hearing process imposes on busy practitioners who voluntarily serve on a reviewing panel. Our decision here should not be understood to mean the reviewing panel must involve itself in procedural or evidentiary issues. Neither do we intend to suggest the *1273hearing officer lacks the power to preside over the hearing, including, as required by West Hills’s bylaws, the power to maintain decorum and ensure that all participants in the hearing have a reasonable opportunity to be heard and to present oral and documentary evidence. But an order dismissing the proceedings is a far cry from a ruling on a procedural or evidentiary issue, and a reviewing panel is equally if not more qualified to determine when a party’s refusal to cooperate has so interfered with the panel’s ability to resolve the issues as to justify sanctions. We hold only that once a hearing has been requested, the review process may not be concluded without the reviewing panel’s informed approval. Mileikowsky v. Tenet Healthsystem, supra, 128 Cal.App.4th 531, therefore is disapproved to the extent it holds that a hearing officer without the approval of the reviewing entity may terminate a hearing as a sanction for the physician’s conduct in disobeying orders or disrupting hearing sessions. (Id. at pp. 560-562.) But we have no complaint with the hearing officer’s ruling in that case that the hearing would be recessed whenever Dr. Mileikowsky, who had reacted emotionally and yelled in reaction to a ruling, was “ ‘out of control’ ” (id. at p. 545), or the officer’s ruling that the hospital could disclose to the reviewing panel that Dr. Mileikowsky had violated the officer’s discovery orders (id. at p. 543).

We also are cognizant of the arguments that limiting a hearing officer’s remedial power to granting continuances will encourage disruptive behavior and that unless a hearing officer has the power to impose sanctions, an obstructive physician may be able to extend the review process unreasonably, endangering the public health and welfare and forcing a facility’s other practitioners to monitor the physician’s actions until his or her appointment expires or the hearing is completed. The arguments raise legitimate concerns, but we are not convinced they justify allowing a hearing officer to impose terminating sanctions.

In the most severe cases, where the failure to take action may result in an imminent danger to the health of any individual, the physician’s clinical privileges can be summarily suspended. (§ 809.5.) Even when there is no summary suspension, a physician generally would wish to have the hearing held as soon as possible, if only to resolve uncertainty about his or her status at the hospital. A delay in the proceedings will injure a physician economically when the physician’s privileges have been denied, summarily suspended, or restricted, or if they expire without the physician’s reappointment. In the present case, for example, Dr. Mileikowsky could not practice obstetrics at West Hills because he was never granted privileges for that practice. He was entitled to practice gynecology until his gynecological privileges expired, and he was allowed a 60-day extension of those privileges, but even that extension expired long before the hearing officer dismissed the proceedings. And, that a physician’s staff privileges expire in the absence of *1274reappointment protects the hospital against the possibility a physician whose work is substandard could forever impede the hospital’s ability to deliver quality medical care.7

In addition, section 809.6, subdivision (a) authorizes hospitals to develop their own procedures and provides that parties to peer review proceedings “are bound by any additional notice and hearing provisions contained in any applicable professional society or medical staff bylaws which are not inconsistent with [the statutory peer review process].” A hospital therefore has power through its bylaws to provide additional protections against obstructive behavior. Thus, although we conclude a hearing officer may not on his or her own initiative dismiss the proceedings, we see no reason why a hospital might not create through its bylaws a simplified procedure that would allow a reviewing panel to consider and adopt a hearing officer’s recommendation that the proceedings be dismissed for a physician’s failure to cooperate. And a reviewing panel reasonably could infer from a physician’s failure to provide information that the information in question is unfavorable or tends to show the physician cannot or will not cooperate with others and for that reason may be unwilling or unable to function effectively in a hospital setting.

Finally, we question West Hills’s assertion that it could not proceed without evidence only Dr. Mileikowsky could provide. West Hills’s peer review committee, as a result of an informal investigation, determined grounds existed for denying or refusing to extend staff privileges to Dr. Mileikowsky. West Hills presumably had some evidence to support the peer review committee’s allegations. It had no need for information possessed by Dr. Mileikowsky to establish the validity of the allegation that he had failed to notify the medical staff his privileges at Century City Hospital had been terminated or the allegation that he had misrepresented that his resignation from Encino-Tarzana Regional Medical Center had been voluntary. Similarly, West Hills did not need Dr. Mileikowsky’s evidence to substantiate the allegation that Dr. Mileikowsky had attended a patient at West Hills and had prepared to perform a caesarean section on her even though he lacked obstetrical privileges and she had requested he stay away. Nor did West Hills require information in Dr. Mileikowsky’s possession to persuade the reviewing panel Dr. Mileikowsky had failed to cooperate in West Hills’s investigation of the actions taken against him by the other hospitals. The validity of the allegation Cedars-Sinai Medical Center had reported Dr. Mileikowsky’s *1275privileges had been suspended for actions falling into the adverse action classification of “Incompetence/Malpractice/Negligence” is fully supported by the existence of the report itself, a document West Hills was required to, and did, obtain from the Medical Board. (§ 805.5.) There seems little reason to conclude Dr. Mileikowsky’s refusal to provide information would have prevented West Hills from making its case had the hearing been held within the 45-day period set forth in West Hills’s bylaws or the 60-day period contained in section 809.2, subdivision (h).

The code contains protections against the possibility a physician might attempt to obtain some advantage by refusing to reveal the nature of his arguments or supporting evidence until the hearing. For example, the hearing officer is entitled to consider a party’s lack of cooperation when ruling on that party’s own request for information. (§ 809.2, subd. (e)(4).) Initial applicants for hospital privileges may not introduce “information not produced upon request of the peer review body during the application process, unless the initial applicant establishes that the information could not have been produced previously in the exercise of reasonable diligence.” (§ 809.3, subd. (b)(2).) In all cases, the hearing officer, as indicated, has the power to grant a continuance if a party fails to provide access to information in that party’s possession. (§ 809.2, subd. (d).) A party’s failure to disclose the identity of a witness or produce copies of documents the party expects to submit at the hearing at least 10 days before the hearing also is good cause for a continuance. (§ 809.2, subd. (f).) Similarly, section 809.2, subdivision (h), which requires that a hearing be commenced within 60 days after receipt of the request for a hearing and that the peer review process be completed within a reasonable time, creates an exception when the physician fails to comply with the obligation to allow inspection and copying of documentary information.

V.

In sum, we are not persuaded the power granted the hearing officer to “impose any safeguards the protection of the peer review process and justice requires” (§ 809.2, subd. (d)) includes authority to terminate the peer review process without the reviewing panel’s approval, or that the interests of the people of California and their medical facilities to preserve the highest standards of medical practice cannot be protected without implying such authority into the statutory scheme. It follows that the hearing officer’s order dismissing the proceedings was unauthorized. And, as decisions relating to clinical privileges are generally the province of a hospital’s peer review bodies and not its governing body (but see § 809.05, subds. (b) & (c)), West Hills’s governing board similarly lacked the authority to ratify the order of dismissal.

*1276We therefore affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal.

George, C. J., Chin, J., Moreno, J., and Corrigan, J., concurred.

Except as otherwise indicated, all further statutory references are to the Business and Professions Code.

Dr. Mileikowsky’s problems at the Encino-Tarzana Regional Medical Center are chronicled in Mileikowsky v. Tenet Healthsystem (2005) 128 Cal.App.4th 531 [27 Cal.Rptr.3d 171].

West Hills cites a second provision of its bylaws that provides that a physician’s failure to appear and proceed at the hearing shall be deemed to constitute voluntary acceptance of the recommendation or action involved and acts as a waiver of all other rights inuring to the physician under the provisions of the bylaws. But on this record, the only reason Dr. Mileikowsky failed to appear at the hearing was because the proceedings were dismissed by the hearing officer before a hearing was convened. In any event, whatever the provisions of the bylaws invoked, the order’s effect was to dismiss the proceedings before the reviewing panel had any involvement in them.

The cited section is part of the Health Care Quality Improvement Act of 1986, title 42 United States Code section 11101 et seq., enacted to respond to a “national need to restrict the ability of incompetent physicians to move from State to State without disclosure or discovery of the physician’s previous damaging or incompetent performance” (42 U.S.C. § 11101(2)).

In Webman, the peer review committee recommended denial of a physician’s staff privileges for the physician’s failure to cooperate in an investigation of an adverse action taken against him at another facility. The reviewing panel affirmed the recommendation. The court agreed, pointing out the hospital had reason to be concerned about the quality of care the physician might provide and was justified in denying privileges to the physician for his conduct in obstructing the investigation, conduct that made it difficult or impossible for the hospital to learn whether or not its concerns were well founded. (Webman v. Little Co. of Mary Hospital, supra, 39 Cal.App.4th at pp. 602-603.) The hearing officer apparently adopted the same reasoning here, concluding that Dr. Mileikowsky’s failure to cooperate justified the recommendation to deny staff privileges. But whether Dr. Mileikowsky’s conduct disclosed that he was unable to deliver high quality medical care at West Hills was a question for the reviewing panel, not the hearing officer.

Nothing in our decision should be understood to limit the power of an arbitrator or panel of arbitrators to impose terminating sanctions when the arbitrator or panel of arbitrators is appointed under section 809.2, subdivision (a) to both preside over the hearing and determine the merits of the peer review committee’s recommendation.

We held in Anton v. San Antonio Community Hosp., supra, 19 Cal.3d 802, that a physician with staff privileges had a right to reappointment until the governing authorities determined after a fair hearing that the physician did not meet the reasonable standards of the hospital. (Id. at pp. 824-825.) We were not there confronted with a delay caused by the physician’s failure to cooperate, and our remarks should not be construed to suggest a hospital is required to renew or extend an existing appointment when the proceedings are delayed by the physician’s obstructive conduct.