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i am totally enamored with all of the statements of getting lawyers involved and gathering evidence. don't work through the given channels but let's work behind the scenes and make a video put it on youtube like lindsey lohan. that works very well on grey's anatomy and er, but not so much in real life.
there are pluses and minuses to everything that may be proposed. there are systems in place for you. the ACGME provides the guidelines of what to do in an anonymous way Complaint Procedures they have even made a statement to residents and medicals students about how they are in the process of rectifying situations Letter to Residents from the ACGME
i truly recommend that people work with the system in place to help your situation. the malignancy of the past is changing and not well tolerated today. i think that you may be surprised. http://www.acgme.org/acWebsite/resInfo/ri_complaint.asp
PediBoneDoc,
I suggest you re-read these procedures quoted. I have personally had conversations with David Leach in this arena. The ACGME will, in fact, not accept an anonymous complaint. They will not guarantee anonymity. They will not intervene on behalf of a resident aggrieved. This is very clear in the language of the documents you cite.
I call your attention to sentence number 2 in the complaint document: "The ACGME will not intervene on behalf of an individual complainant regarding matters of admission, appointment, credit, promotion, or dismissal of faculty, residents or fellows." This is a clear as a shotgun pointed at your head on a bright summer morning.
Concerning what they do with the complaint, I call your attention to paragraph 6. "During the period when the complaint is being processed, the Complaint Officer shall maintain the relevant correspondence in a case file that is separate from the official program file. When the case has been closed, the file shall not be retained." i.e, they throw it away.
Second, the resident has to go through the institutional channels, prior to contacting the ACGME. While this may work in a large university GME program, just how is this going to work in the 350 bed community hospital? They say they will attempt to maintain confidentiality, but after requiring you to go through those channels, what is the probability of that?
The second reference is Dave Leach's letter to residents concerning the 80 hour rule, which we all know is widely violated. This has been extensively published, and the departments have ways of subverting the surveys.
Chances are the DIO and the PDs go golfing on Saturdays. And you don't think they will circle the wagons? ChildNeuro is right. Forgive me for not being ready to sign onto your theories, but I've been around the block have seen lots and lots of bad stuff and I'm not buying it. The rules are there to provide the institutions a legal trail to reach the goal they wish. If they are evil, then they will retaliate and do so in such a way as to render it impossible to prove.
Unless and until this system has some fundamental checks and balances, and that means Congressional legislation and amendments to the CMS regulations governing GME, with teeth, the beatings will continue.
What is required? For honest institutions such as your, probably nothing.
For dishonest institutions and programs and those who run them, a strong Whistleblower protection regulation and an inspector general's office from CMS who will take the enforcement of regulations seriously.
It is in the public's best interest to provide an alternative protection. It is in the public's best interest to insure that those programs take their job of medical education seriously and that those who would protest abuse, waste and fraud would be protected.
While the ACGME may be able to squelch the most blatant abuses, they chose not to protect individual residents. Until there is an alternate protection, such as depriving an program of its IMEA or DMEA or both funds if it retailates, then you speak up at your personal peril.