November 20, 2009
Updated list of Fort Hood posts
This is just wrong. The Army knew as far back as 2007 that the muslim murderer was proselytizing on top of being fat, stupid and unreliable. Here’s a memo documenting his poor judgment and lack of professionalism.
Highlights: he allowed a homicidal psychotic patient to escape from the ER, he failed to show up for call and didn’t answer his pages and he failed *Step 3 of his medical licensing test preventing him from getting his license so he was held back until he did. Most troubling, in his final year of residency, he saw only 30 patients in 38 weeks in a community clinic. In a university clinic, he would easily see 30 patients a week.
Why did it take until the end of the rotation to discover it?
In a residency outside the Army this would not have been tolerated. Political correctness has led to murder of Americans on American soil by an Islamic terrorist. It has to stop.
NPR obtained the memo signed by the chief of the Psychiatry Residency at Walter Reed, Major Scott Moran. After listing the muslim murderer’s deficiencies, Maj Moran concludes:
In spite of all this, I am not able to say that he is not competent to graduate, nor do I think a period of academic probation at the end of his training would be beneficial.
He would be able to contain his behavior enough to complete any period of probation successfully.
Contain his behavior? Sounds like a time bomb.
Step 3 United States Medical Licensing Exam (USMLE)
Step 3 assesses whether you can apply medical knowledge and understanding of biomedical and clinical science essential for the unsupervised practice of medicine, with emphasis on patient management in ambulatory settings. Step 3 provides a final assessment of physicians assuming independent responsibility for delivering general medical care. A principal organizing dimension for Step 3 design is normal conditions and disease categories. Second and third organizing dimensions are the clinical encounter frame and physician tasks. Step 3 content reflects a data-based model of generalist medical practice in the United States.
PRITE EXAM is a test taken by psychiatry residents 3-4 times during their residency. It covers all the separate components of psychiatry and is used to assess the competency of residents and highlight the areas that need attention.
GMEC - Graduate Medical Consortium
The GMEC mission is to improve access to high quality primary care for citizens of Southwest Virginia by forming educational partnerships between communities, local physicians, and primary care residency programs in Virginia, Tennessee North Carolina, Kentucky, and West Virginia. GMEC creates and supports medical residency preceptor sites in rural and underserved communities in Southwest Virginia.
CCN’s Campbell Brown – NPR’s Daniel Zwerdling discuss memo.
No comments:
Post a Comment