Thе plaintiffs brought this action seeking damages for defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, unfair trade practices, interference with contractual relations, and violation of the plaintiff Robert J. Cronin’s civil rights. One of the claims is that the defendant defamed the plaintiff Robert J. Cronin by falsely writing to the Impaired Physician Committee (I.P.C.) of the Massachusetts Medical Society (society) that Dr. Cronin was an imрaired physician.
2
As part of the discovery proceedings, the plaintiffs served deposition subpoenae duces tecum on the society and on Charles H. Montgomery, a member of the I.P.C.
3
The subpoenae sought a letter from the defendant to the I.P.C.,
4
the records of the I.P.C. investigation, and documents
5
concerning the investigation of the plaintiff made by the I.P.C. at the request of the defendant. Pursuant to. Mass. R. Civ. P. 26 (c),
We summarize the procedural background. The plaintiff Robert J. Cronin and the defendant are licensed physicians, specializing in the practice of orthopaedic surgery and are members in good standing of the medical staff of Cape Cod Hospital. The plaintiff joined the hospital staff in 1979; the defendant joined approximately ten years earlier. The complaint alleges a number of acts of the defendant not herе relevant and also alleges that, in the spring or summer of 1982, the defendant wrote the I.P.C. “falsely charging that Dr. Cronin’s ability to practice medicine is impaired by the use of drugs and/or alcohol.”
After investigation, on July 16, 1982, the I.P.C. declined to make a “judgment on the case per se.” The I.P.C. stated that “at this point [the case] is best investigated on a local level; and should our services be needed in the future, consultation or referral back to us would be welcome.”
On October 7, 1982, the Cape Cod Hospital through its chief of staff informed Dr. Cronin that its investigation on other charges against him commenced as a result of a request by the defendant was closed. On March 4, 1983, the plaintiffs filed their complaint, and on the same day, the plaintiffs notified the defendant that the custodian of records of the society and Dr. Charles H. Montgomery of the I.P.C. would be deposed on April 7, 1983.
The society and Dr. Montgomery applied for a protective order. The affidavit accompanying the application disclosed that the society is a voluntary association of physicians, and that it is regulated by its own by-laws, rules, and procedures. The affidavit states that in 1978, the society established the *528 I.P.C. “to deal with matters relating to impaired or disabled physicians.” In order to encourage referrals, the I.P.C. adopted a policy of strict confidentiality. “[W]ritten referrals to the Committee and information developed by the Committee in the course of its work are kept confidential and are not exhibited to or provided to third persons.” The I.P.C. “believe[s] that only by assuring the confidentiality of information provided to it and maintaining the anonymity of persons coopеrating with the Committee can it promote the trust and reliance which is essential to the Committee’s work.” Accordingly, the society and the chairman of the I.P.C. ask that the “[s]ubpoenae be quashed and that their respective depositions . . .notbehad.”
The judge denied the society’s motion. In his memorandum and order, the judge noted that “G. L. c. 231, § 85N does grant such Committees immunity from liability for good faith actions.” But the judge concluded that the statute does not “grant either the defendant ... or the Committee immunity from discovery.” The judge further noted that “[t]he Board of Registration of [szc] Medicine has a similar function to that of the [I.P.C.],” and that Board of Registration in Medicine complaints and complaint files are public records, subject to exceptions not here applicable. See 243 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.02 8 (a) (1) (1979). The judge ordered that discovery or information obtained as a result of discovery not be disclosed to persons other than the parties of their counsel or except in the course of further judicial proceedings in the case. The judge expressly left open the question of the admissibility of evidence obtained as a result of this discovery.
Ripeness of the appeal.
The appellants do not challenge the general rule that the discovery ordеrs are interlocutory and not appealable.
See Borman
v.
Borman,
*529
The appellants assert that we should permit this appeal because no legitimate purpose is served by requiring witnesses to invite contempt in order to obtain appellate review. We do not agree. “ ‘Orders compelling the testimony of witnesses are among the most common of everyday incidents to the process of disposing of cases, and objections on thе ground of privilege ... are frequently raised,’ ... 4 Moore’s Federal Practice par. 26.83 [6], at 26-599 (2d ed. 1979),”
Borman
v.
Borman,
Moreover, “[c]onfining the right to get appellate review of discovery orders to cases where the party [or witness] against whom the order was directed cared enough to incur a sanction for contempt is a crude but serviceable method ... of identifying the most burdensome discovery orders and in effect waiving the finality requirement for them.”
Marrese
v.
American Academy
*530
of Orthopaedic Surgeons,
The claim of privilege.
The appellants ask
that
we weigh “the clear public need for candid, vigorous and effective peer review against the need for pre-trial discovery” and conclude that the records and documents of thе I.P.C. should be kept confidential. The issue is whether any reports, minutes, or other documents generated by the I.P.C. as a result of the defendant’s complaint are discoverable. The principal case in
*531
support of the appellants’ position is
Bredice
v.
Doctors Hosp., Inc.,
We find more persuasive the reasoning thаt “the true efficiency of such committees may be fostered by an atmosphere of openness, in that they may be less likely to rely on hearsay or information tainted by bias or prejudice in making their decisions, if the underlying reasons therefor can be required to be disclosed in a proper case. Although perhaps there is some merit in the hospital’s contention that incompetent physicians mаy be more easily excluded or removed from staffs if
*532
the privilege is recognized, it may also be that a potential Pasteur, Lister or Semmelweis, who advocates salutary changes in procedures may be excluded simply because he ‘makes waves,’ if the proceedings are shrouded from public perusal. It is also important to assure that the decisions of such peer review committees are not made on improper considerations such as those of race or sex.”
Ott
v.
St. Luke Hosp. of Campbell County, Inc.,
Further, “[i]n Massachusetts, the area of privileges concerning confidential communications is limited. . . . The principle that the public ‘has a right to every man’s evidence’ (Wigmore, Evidence [McNaughton rev.] §§ 2192, 2285 [1961]) has been preferred, on the whole, to countervailing interests. Privileges are exceptional.”
Matter of Pappas,
The society’s claim of privilege is not aided by the fact that the plаintiff, Robert J. Cronin, seeks only those documents pertaining to the I.P.C.’s investigation of him. The Board of Registration in Medicine has a function similar to the I.P.C. The board’s investigations are confidential by statute. However, the policy of confidentiality is inapplicable to a request made by a physician under investigation for the board’s investigative records and documents. See G.L.c. 112, § 5, fourth par. 10
The society argues that the Superior Court judge erred in not balancing the public interest in peer review against the Cronins’ need for the documents. While we have noted that such a balancing test is useful in determining whether a protective order should be issued to protect confidential information, see
Petition of the Dep’t of Social Servs. to Dispense with Consent to Adoption,
The society, in its brief, suggests that the fact that the plaintiffs failed to set forth the specific reasons why they need the I.P.C. documents should have been explicitly taken into account by the judge in his memorandum and order denying the protective order. We look to Federal decisions interpreting the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for guidance. See
Rollins Envtl. Servs., Inc.
v.
Superior Court,
*535 Relying on Barrows v. Bell, 1 Gray 301, 315 (1856), the society argues that, because he is a member of the society, Dr. Cronin is bound by the I.P.C.’s policy of confidentiality. In Barrows, we held that a member of the medical society “voluntarily submitted himself to the government and jurisdiction of the society in his professional relations, so long as [it] acted within the scope of [its] authority.” Id. at 315. The society’s reliance on Barrows v. Bell, supra, is misplaced. The issue in Barrows was whether the society’s publication of a true account of a membеr’s expulsion was privileged against a libel suit by the member. There was no question that the society had jurisdiction to conduct the proceedings that led to the member’s expulsion. We affirmed the society’s jurisdiction to hold such proceedings, which we found to be quasi-judicial, and accordingly held that the publication, as a true report of a tribunal with jurisdiction over the subject matter in question, was privileged. Id. at 311-315.
While the рower to discipline or expel members is inherent to the society’s function and a power to which members clearly assent when they join the society, the I.P.C.’s confidentiality policy appears to have been adopted by the I.P.C. itself to “encourage referrals and to encourage cooperation by impaired physicians.” The society is asking us to expand the Barrows holding to include the policies of “more than twenty committees,” without regard to the members’ actual consent to the policy, knowledge of the policy, or the impact of the policy on the members’ legal rights. The society offers no case support for this proposition, and we can find none.
We conclude that the judge correctly denied the society’s motion. “This does not mean, however, that courts аre without power to exercise their discretion to protect [peer review committees and their members] from unnecessary harassment or frivolous inquiries.”
Dow Jones & Co.
v.
Superior Court,
Appeal dismissed.
Notes
A physician who abuses alcohol or drugs.
Dr. Montgomery was the member of the I.P.C. who made “discreet inquiries” into Dr. Strayer’s allegations.
Dr. Strayer provided Dr. Cronin with a copy of his letter to the I.P.C. He is not before us as an appellant.
The plaintiffs sought “[a] 11 documents of any nature whatsoever sent by Dr. Luther M. Strayer, III, or received or prepared by the Committee on the Impaired Physician (the “IPC”) of the Massachusetts Medical Society (or any member, agent or employee of said Society) relating in any way to Dr. Robert J. Cronin; said documents to include, but not be limited to, all correspondence and other documents received by the IPC from Dr. Strayer or any other person concerning Dr. Cronin, all notes or other documents memorializing any investigation conducted by the IPC concerning Dr. Cronin, all minutes of IPC meetings at which Dr. Cronin was discussed, all correspondence or other documents concerning Dr. Cronin sent by the IPC to any persоn, and a list of all'persons contacted by the IPC when investigating any matter concerning Dr. Cronin together with said persons’ address and telephone number and any notes of conversations with such persons.”
The Federal statute and its underlying policies are so strongly enforced in the Federal courts that a reporter and a newspaper relying on the First Amendment to the United States Constitution have been denied relief by two Justices of the United States Supreme Court. See
New York Times Co.
v.
Jascalevich,
Very few inroads have been made on the general rule that pretrial disclosure orders are not appealable. In
United States
v.
Nixon,
The most common exception arises in cases where a person has custody of material as to which another person has a privilege of nondisclosure. In those limited circumstances, the courts have permitted the person who asserts the privilege of nondisclosure to appeal the disclosure order without awaiting the outcome of the litigation.
Perlman
v.
United States,
Courts following
Bredice
have concluded that statements made to review committees in the course of the committee’s investigative work are not within the scope of the privilege. See
Gillman
v.
United States,
Courts in other jurisdictions have concluded that statutes which exempt peer review committee proceedings from some or all aspects of discovery should be enforced by trial judges, see,
e.g., Morse
v.
Gerity,
We observe that under G. L. c. 112, § 5, fourth par., as well as G. L. c. 231, § 85N, good faith and absence of malice is a defense to the imposition of liability. This statutory construction is consistent with a requirement that discovery may be compelled to determine issues such as good faith or lack of malice. See
Herbert
v.
Lando,
