> It's considered unethical for doctors or lawyers to have their work supervised by anyone who isn't a doctor or lawyer.
With lawyers (more familiar there than with doctors) I don't think that's usually the case; the ABA model rules don't prohibit lawyers from being supervised by non-lawyers (though they do prohibit lawyers from co-owning law firms with non-lawyers, or sharing legal fees with non-lawyers, and they do prohibit lawyers from allowing their employer to "to direct or regulate the lawyer's professional judgment" in providing legal services -- whether or not the employer is a lawyer; this doesn't prevent supervision of the lawyer as an employee, it just essentially means that the lawyer doesn't have a Nuremberg defense of "just following orders" for professional nonfeasance or misconduct.)
With lawyers (more familiar there than with doctors) I don't think that's usually the case; the ABA model rules don't prohibit lawyers from being supervised by non-lawyers (though they do prohibit lawyers from co-owning law firms with non-lawyers, or sharing legal fees with non-lawyers, and they do prohibit lawyers from allowing their employer to "to direct or regulate the lawyer's professional judgment" in providing legal services -- whether or not the employer is a lawyer; this doesn't prevent supervision of the lawyer as an employee, it just essentially means that the lawyer doesn't have a Nuremberg defense of "just following orders" for professional nonfeasance or misconduct.)
http://www.americanbar.org/groups/professional_responsibilit...