thanks everyone!
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Hi guys: I am a PGY3 IM resident and I need your input/ thoughts on how to approach/handle this situation.
2 months into my 3rd year I got an evaluation from my PD that I am "failing"= not meeting expectations for outpt clinic rotation. when I asked how come I did not get any feedback during that rotation, I did not get an answer. now the PD wants me to repeat the rotation (4-5 wks) after the year in July. basically doesn't want me to graduate on time. additionally, the PD doesn't think I am ready to graduate in 6 months (even though I am passing my other rotations). so they can extend my residency for indeterminate length. during the meeting, PD did not mention for how many months the residency will be extended.
I just feel it's unfair that I get no feedbacrd k and just fail the rotation-- find out months later that I am not going to graduate on time. should I contact ACGME? heard they usually back up the PD. is it worth the battle? really devastated right now? thinking of quitting because I am so depressed here. can I find another spot somewhere later?
does this happen? is this normal? there were no goals/expectations given at the beginning of each rotation. there may be a handbook somewhere. but anyway, your input and feedback are much appreciated.
agree as quoted above. also, you should obtain copies of all evaluations to date and obviously should have copies of in-service exam scores. we often hear about things that sound very unfair on these forums. However, if you are otherwise stellar except for some 5-6wk rotation, it should be obvious to objective observers by reading your evaluations and in-service exam results to date.... If those are consistent with what your PD is reporting for this 5-6wk rotation, then you have failed to heed the warnings.read your contract, contact the resident union if you have one ...No need to bother with anyone's advice on this forum including me.
Theyhave to give you ongoing feedback and ample time for remediation prior to failing you. thats their job.
Hi guys: I am a PGY3 IM resident and I need your input/ thoughts on how to approach/handle this situation.
2 months into my 3rd year I got an evaluation from my PD that I am "failing"= not meeting expectations for outpt clinic rotation. when I asked how come I did not get any feedback during that rotation, I did not get an answer. now the PD wants me to repeat the rotation (4-5 wks) after the year in July. basically doesn't want me to graduate on time. additionally, the PD doesn't think I am ready to graduate in 6 months (even though I am passing my other rotations). so they can extend my residency for indeterminate length. during the meeting, PD did not mention for how many months the residency will be extended.
I just feel it's unfair that I get no feedbacrd k and just fail the rotation-- find out months later that I am not going to graduate on time. should I contact ACGME? heard they usually back up the PD. is it worth the battle? really devastated right now? thinking of quitting because I am so depressed here. can I find another spot somewhere later?
does this happen? is this normal? there were no goals/expectations given at the beginning of each rotation. there may be a handbook somewhere. but anyway, your input and feedback are much appreciated.
If it's just one month, then I would just go ahead and do it.
But do read your resident handbook on non-renewals, suspensions, and academic credit. Know the policies and your substantive protections if any that are granted in your handbook. Do not rely on the PD. If he turns on you, then this knowledge will come in handy. Do not rely on the residents union. Their law services do not include fighting an adverse decision by the program. But do see if they can refer you to an attorney interested in pursuing these types of cases.
Repeating a rotation for failing it is not unfair. What often happens is that the program will try to get you to do many more months than just that one rotation. If they think you will resist, then they could start influencing your other attendings or assign you attendings that do not want you to succeed to make sure you do not do well enough to justify whatever sentence they think you deserve. Don't blame the chiefs. Often they are obeying orders from higher up.
This is a dangerous game that programs play. They do not have judicial experience to start handing out sentences that may have nothing to do with real clinical competence. This scenario is of course a problem with unfettered deference. As more residents learn of what happens, more of them will decide to litigate.
Those attendings that participate in such conduct should be aware that they put themselves in a liability position for a tort should the resident decides to sue. Torts include the possibility of punitive damages if a gang-up situation could be reasonably inferred. Even in conservative circuits, ganging up against an employee increases the chances of personal liability as well as any vicarious liability on the part of the hospital, medical school, or healthcare system. The more titled personel involved, the more vicarious liability gets implicated. The more people involved, the more difficult it is to hide tortious conduct under cross examination. Litigation can become ugly very fast with attacks on the credibility of witnesses on both sides. What starts off as something petty can become a nightmare for most involved. Punitive damages means protecting assets and bankruptcy for most attendings, because malpractice insurance does not cover tortious conduct that does not directly involve patient care. It will be expensive to defend against a spirited labor attorney who sees deep pockets everywhere.
I think that in the future, programs will adopt both procedural and substantive protections for residents to prevent tortious conduct from rogue PDs or attendings from causing legal harm. Not because they want to, but because it makes financial sense. It's cheaper to spend a few thousand dollars per resident to make sure that an adverse decision is correct, than to pay for an attorney to prosecute a motion for summary judgment, or even worse, to face the uncertainty of a jury.
This could be the start of something. Watch out for yourself. For now, avoid trouble as best you can.
thanks Roofie-- your post is really enlightening! this whole thing has been so stressful. I have never heard of a PD trying to sabotage the resident's career. but what do I know as a naive resident. I guess I'll do 1-2 months of make up if that's the decision. however, if the PD tries to keep me longer and fail me on other rotations, I may have to go the legal route. although, i am really worried about going that route as a young resident on the verge of finishing residency. my other option is to quit this program and find another spot somewhere for PGY3.....it may be tough to get a 3rd year spot elsewhere. any thoughts?
It's going to be hard to fight this. I wonder what happened to cause you to fail and outpatient rotation. It's normally the ICU or wards that gets people into trouble. Did you not show up at all the clinics on time or something? If it's just a matter of repeating a month or two, probably better to just suck it up and eat the extra time, as long as they'll let you finish. 1 or 2 months in the grand scheme of things doesn't matter. It would/will matter if you were supposed to start fellowship next summer or something. It may hurt you a bit when it comes to licensing, etc. because they usually ask if you were ever on probation, had to remediate something, etc. If you want, you can ask your PD if you could repeat the 1 month as part of your next 6 months, but he probably doesn't want to let you or he would have offered. That would necessitate dropping you from some other rotation, and perhaps they need you to work the wards, etc. or you still have ACGME-required months of other things (ICU, wards, etc.) that you need to do.
i thought you could switch residency as pgy3...saw some IM pgy3 open spots a while ago. please clarify.
I thought that aPD had discussed this issue before but I cannot find a link on the ACGME website regarding such a requirement. I will table the discussion on it until he weighs in.
IIRC, it's specialty-board specific. I know it's the rule in FM but I don't think it's the case in IM and I have no idea about Peds.
Its also the case for Surgery - thought I remembered aPD talking about it in the case of IM, but perhaps he was referring to FM.
Agreed. It's a rule in FM and GS, but not IM. Still, as the OP points out, it's not easy to simply get a PGY-3 in IM either.
Just to add a couple points....I already asked the PD if i could make it during elective time in the next 6 months and the answer was a resounding No. the PD is hell bent to making me stay longer...
i thought you could switch residency as pgy3...saw some IM pgy3 open spots a while ago. please clarify.
I agree. Too many attendings are afraid or unwilling to be the "bad guy/gal" for any number of reasons. Many try to follow the "if you don't have anything good to say, don't say anything at all..." while others are always trying to "focus on the positive". Whatever the case, it can mean a significant training failure with a prolonged loss of time and opportunities.I find it interesting that many times residents have no idea that they are performing poorly...
...Programs sometimes pass residents through and receive an epiphany during the residents' last year. " This guy/gal isn't ready to leave."
It is my experience that programs are often unwilling to take action when they should do so.
Programs generally do not have the time to single out a particular resident and set out to ruin a career...
Many residents who are placed on probation/ remediated seem to be blind sided by this.They never saw it coming. This may merely be a function of a lack of self-awareness.
The best defense against being blind sided is to seek feed back often. If you think that you are not performing well do not bury your head in the sand. Be proactive and contact your advisor or someone else whom you can trust....
I agree. Too many attendings are afraid or unwilling to be the "bad guy/gal" for any number of reasons. Many try to follow the "if you don't have anything good to say, don't say anything at all..." while others are always trying to "focus on the positive". Whatever the case, it can mean a significant training failure with a prolonged loss of time and opportunities.
I have found it very difficult on occasion to counsel and evaluate residents. Their feelings can get hurt. But, that is not really the difficult thing. The harder issue is when they pull out "glowing evals" from other attendings to counter the adverse counseling. When you read between the lines on these "glowing evals", very little is said about the actual clinical abilities/performance.
So, I am stuck with a resident that attendings have avoided honest evaluation (i.e. "he/she is really nice.... patients really like him/her.... gets along with others well....".). What is missing in the eval is the glaring belief AND complete assessment, "he/she is really nice, patients really like him/her, gets along with others well, but.... I wouldn't let him/her operate on my neighbors dog!". These reseidents (not directed at the OP) often have poor in-service performance combined with highly developed social skills that allow them to recruit resident colleagues to help/cover/recover for them. It's worse when they also recruit the "support" of the nurses and ancillary staff....
You have some typos and so, I am having a little difficult being sure I understand your final point/belief....Out of curiosity: let say it was the way around. The resident was not a nice person (what ever that means) who had the compassion and back-up of the nurses and fellow residents, BUT he/she was the next Debakey in the OR. Would he still get a "glowing eval" from you or the other attendings? I believe that the so called nice persons will rise the letter of career faster than those who are actually excellent at the field.
You have some typos and so, I am having a little difficult being sure I understand your final point/belief....
I was not arguing, just making a point that now a days the actual knowledge in medicine or surgial skills is not as important as how well you interact with others for advancing in your profession! And believe me that pisses the hell out of me but what to do, someone has to clean-up after the nice doctors!
(And no, I don't think the old surgeon that trough stuff around in the OR is something we should aspire to go back to)
Out of curiosity: let say it was the way around. The resident was not a nice person (what ever that means) who had the compassion and back-up of the nurses and fellow residents, BUT he/she was the next Debakey in the OR. Would he still get a glowing eval from you or the other attendings? I believe that the so called nice persons will rise the letter of career faster than those who are actually excellent at the field.
Which is where I greatly disagree with you. Yes, social interaction is crucial. But, I again believe good "socialization" necessary in being a functional adult should have already taken place well before you get to residency. A "success" in the medical field requires having the basics to begin with, i.e. be a normal adult human being AND good knowledge/skills....I was ...just making a point that now a days the actual knowledge in medicine or surgial skills is not as important as how well you interact with others for advancing in your profession!...
Trouble is is that this is an uncommon scenario.
There are few "Debakeys/Camerons/Zollingers" etc.
There are few technically incompetent residents.
Most everyone falls into the middle ground. And while it is true that one should not assume that having wonderful social graces *replaces* technical skills and knowledge base, I hold that those who do have such skills will do better than the ******* with "great hands".
IMHO, there are few procedures which are so technically demanding/rare that they require a superstar surgeon.
Surprising and suggests less medical understanding and even less awareness of DrHouse.... He is wrong more then he is right, he experiemnts more then practices good medicine and as in in all fiction a blaze of luck and light bulb shiny moment seems to save the day at the end.......Quite frankly for an internist, I would prefer a Dr. House over someone personable and less competent...
I have always disagreed with the notion that a resident needs to be sociable with the people he works with to be a competent physician. Certainly he can't be an A**hole to patients.
I believe there is room in this profession for xxxxxx who believe they are the next Debackey. These guys are the ones who will more likely take on difficult cases, because they believe they are that good and they do not worry about their "stats" as much.
To be sure, being an xxxxxx will likely increase the chances of getting fired for pretextual reasons and is not good on average for a medical career. Physicians do not like referring their patients to A**holes. That's their legitimate choice.
However, the notion that attendings will purposely expose such xxxxxx to a heightened competency standard smacks of self-righteousness and is an abuse of what should be an objective evaluation. Many evaluators can't separate personal feelings from objective evaluations. What is made worse is that these evaluations may implicate the color of law in licensing issues or severely affect a physician's livelihood.
xxxxx will have limited economic opportunities but they can still contribute to this profession. They can function as solo practitioners or find groups willing to tolerate their personal shortcoming given their other formidable strengths. Their wholesale persecution by the establishment smacks of injustice. This persecution is an example of liberal ideology embracing more totalitarian methods in effecting change. What ever happened to the notion of first do no harm?
If a program does not like xxxxxx, then it should better screen them prior to acceptance. Cutting a**holes off after they have made major commitments to the program wastes federal funds in getting enough technically competent physicians onto the marketplace and violates many basic legal theories that this profession can get away with due to unfettered deference.
There is a perception that there are xxxxxx in surgery. Many of them are really good. That's fine with me. If I need an operation, I could care less if the physician is nice to others. All I would care about is whether he is technically competent and could get me out alive without complications.
Quite frankly for an internist, I would prefer a Dr. House over someone personable and less competent.
I do not endorse being an xxxxxxx to your colleagues, but I will work with xxxxx regardless of my personal feelings. I do not think they should be persecuted in a training environment; however, they should be made aware of their shortcoming. They should be held accountable to the same technical standard as everyone else.