No. I think you are missing the point. He did not say he never received the email. Rather, that was your caveat. Also, I am
NOT arguing that his name was or was not on this list.
If I believe it at face value, with him
forgetting email/deleting email/not getting email, it is still not believeable. Unless he had his head deep in a nuclear bunker for two months, I just don't see him (or any other resident in the program) NOT hearing about his colleagues/classmates/friends being on this list and not saying, "Hmmmm maybe I need one of those strange and mysterious PPD things". I also find it hard to believe that any PD/Prog coordinator would get a letter listing residents in danger of being suspended/fired and not
generally reminding all residents in the program.I got your point.
It is a matter of opinion in which we differ. I have watched over the past 15+yrs and seen that a single, well placed incident of ~excessive force goes a long way to cleaning up residents' and attendings not doing their job. Presuming, the PD didn't respond to a letter that his/her residents were in danger of suspension/termination, presuming the prog-coordinator didn't respond to a letter that his/her residents were in danger of suspension/termination, what ever the case,
I am certain everyone up and down that radiology residency AND all other residecies in that hospital AND nursing/allied health folks will now be on time with health maintenance, PPDs, etc... That one incident did more then a thousand emails ever could. The residents in this program felt it. The PD felt it. The assistant PD felt it. The prog-coord felt it..... After this incident, they don't even need to phone! That is efficiency. It is the same for attendings. It only takes your privileges/cases being canceled once for you to know dictations need to be done on time.
PS: the residents would be idiots to not, in light of incident, check their emails, fix spam filters, etc..... efficiency