Lol let me clarify one thing for the people that talk about skirting things on the PEx:
ALL doctors do that. Let me emphasize. ALL. When on the exam, doctors don't check about mood/affect/content/thought process yet all these are usually checked off on normal for all patients. Lung sounds for a simple ankle sprain- although breath sounds aren't checked off, things like no respiratory distress and wheezes/rales/ronchi are marked negative. In terms of Skin, almost always is skin marked dry and warm with no rashes unless there's a rash complaint. The doctor isn't inspecting every aspect of the body for a rash.
Review of Systems:
Most doctors check off far more ROS markers than they ask. One doc might ask: You have fevers/chills/n/v/d, neck pain, back pain, abd pain, urinary sx. But they will negatively check off fevers, wheezes, fatigue, sore throat, sneezing, rhinorrhea, cough, constipation, bowel/bladder incontinence, skin rash.
This isn't just one doctor, this isn't just ER, this is everywhere you go. FM, ER, IM ect.
I'm not saying what OP did was correct, and I'm not accusing anybody here of doing the same, but at one point in our lives, we have all lied. I know plenty of people that have over-exaggerated their applications in the past years, got into medical school. Hell I know one man who blatantly wrote an activity he didn't, was accepted into Cornell, graduated #2 in his class, and now is doing a radiology residency at Brigham and Woman's hospital at Harvard. I know one of the docs I work with over-exaggerate the hours he worked as a Nurse prior to starting medical school by I'd say a good 1.5x hours, and he's the head of the ER where I work and probably one of the best doctors I've worked with. As House would say, "everybody lies". Is it ethical? Absolutely not. 100% not ethical. But everybody does it whether you would like to think it or not.
Prime example: At an interview at X-COM, I was talking to another app about the book DO's by Gevits, talked about how I loved reading the book yada yada yada, he said he read the book so I started mentioning specific parts of the book and he had the deer in the headlights look. He lied, I'm sure he skimmed the book. Now my interviewer had her acceptance letter to the DO school she attended along with a cute letter her nephew wrote when she was accepted into medical school in that book so she had an emotional significance attached to the book. I was able to talk about it with her extensively. I'm sure if somebody who didn't read the book interviewed that guy, he would BS it enough to talk about why that propelled him into DO. Ethical? That's debatable in this case, but it worked for him. It happens far more frequently than you think it does and it all points back to the way the system is structured.
Another ethical question to ask:
If you lied to your s/o or lied to your parents or lied to your friends about something- does that predispose you to be a ****ty doctor because you're unethical and you're a liar? If anybody comes to me and says that they have not lied to their friends, or their family, or their parents about something in the past 4 years then I am going to find it so hard pressed to believe that and I will definitely think they are so disillusioned from reality that they don't notice that they are lying.
Point is, everybody lies. That does not mean you are going to be a bad doctor or an incomplete doctor.