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Our top priority is providing value to members. Your Member Services team is here to ensure you maximize your ACS member benefits, participate in College activities, and engage with your ACS colleagues. It's all here.

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Become a member and receive career-enhancing benefits

Our top priority is providing value to members. Your Member Services team is here to ensure you maximize your ACS member benefits, participate in College activities, and engage with your ACS colleagues. It's all here.

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Statement on Restrictive Covenants

The Statement on Restrictive Covenants was developed by the ACS Division of Advocacy and Health Policy and was approved by the ACS Board of Regents at its June 2021 meeting in Chicago, IL.

ACS

October 1, 2021

The following Statement on Restrictive Covenants was developed by the American College of Surgeons (ACS) Division of Advocacy and Health Policy. The ACS Board of Regents approved the statement at its June 2021 meeting in Chicago, IL.


Surgeons may be asked to enter into contractual terms for employment that include a “restrictive covenant” or “covenant not to compete,” enforceable upon their voluntary separation or involuntary dismissal from employment, with or without cause.

Members of the ACS also are urged to have all employment contracts reviewed by an attorney who is familiar with local laws and precedents in the state where they intend to be employed prior to signing any contract.

Whenever possible, members are urged to avoid restrictive covenants that interfere with the uninterrupted delivery of qualified surgical care, limit patient access to care, or limit patient choice. The impact of such agreements is detrimental to the physician-patient relationship.

Any restrictive covenant provisions included in a physician employment agreement should be explicit and detailed. In discussions with their attorneys, members of the College should specifically seek advice relative to the following:

  • The defined geographic area covered by the restriction
  • The duration of the restrictive covenant
  • Whether the duration extends beyond the time necessary for the employer to recoup any monetary consideration provided as a signing bonus, moving expense, and/or other financial benefits received during the recruitment process
  • Whether the restrictive covenant clause renews with the automatic renewal of other employment terms in subsequent contracts
  • What the contract specifies is received in exchange for accepting the terms of the restrictive covenant, and whether courts in that state consider what is received adequate to enforce those terms

Although the College recognizes the perceived necessity of restrictive covenants from the perspective of employers and the intent behind their inclusion in physician employment agreements, members of the College should carefully review the restrictive covenants contained in proposed employment contracts with expert legal counsel and negotiate mutually agreeable terms with prospective employers.