20 Nov 2019

Medical students 'scapegoats' for Otago University's failure - parent and health professional

9:03 am on 20 November 2019

The University of Otago interns caught abusing their overseas work placements are being used as scapegoats, a medical student's family says.

Male and female medical students or doctors using digital tablet and laptop during the lecture or conference. Focus on the man with pad

Photo: 123rf

The university prevented 53 final-year medical students from graduating with their peers after it discovered they were holidaying instead of interning in hospitals during overseas placements, and falsified papers to cover it up.

Their punishments include paying back any government grant money owed, writing a reflective essay and making up time with extra approved work.

However, a medical professional who is also mother of one medical student not being punished said the practice was well known yet only a few were paying the price.

The woman, who spoke to RNZ on the condition of anonymity, said her son would be able to graduate but it would be without many of his fellow students.

"Obviously it's put a total dampener on the whole ceremony. These students have got bonds over the last five years and need to keep those bonds going in order to be effective practitioners and support each other," she said.

"I think it's ostracising some students unfairly when it was obviously the university's system that let them down and the individual students have been the ones who have taken the fall."

The university investigation found one in five of its final year medical students across the Wellington, Dunedin and Christchurch campuses did not meet its attendance requirements.

The students did need to be punished and made to reflect on their actions, but stopping them from graduating was overkill, she said.

"To say on one hand, yes, you can graduate. You can become a doctor next week because we need you working in the hospitals, but actually you're not going to be able to stand on the stage and get recognition for the five years work and study that you've done with your colleagues.

"I think that's appalling, it's making these students into scapegoats."

Many medical professionals were horrified by what had happened, she said.

"I think that everyone feels quite sick that these students are being made to take the blame for what is a well-known and well documented and evidenced process that's been going on for years."

A practicing GP for more than 30 years was concerned the students may be outed when graduation day comes around.

Each ceremony features a graduand booklet, listing who is being awarded their degrees on the day and who will get their degree in absentia.

He said that could be used to identify those being punished for abusing their placement or could mean other absent students were painted as guilty if it wasn't handled carefully.

"If the large group of trainee interns is listed as in abstentia, then that does become very, very long term public record. While not denying the fact that they have acted very, very inappropriately, it does raise the question of is theirs some sort of punishment disproportionate and very long term to what they have actually done," he said.

The students should not be the only ones to bear the blame, he said, as the university either did not know about the placement issues when it should have or failed to act if it did.

The University of Otago said its latest inquiry would look at the placement issues from previous years and how the issue flew under the radar, but it needed to act when concerns were raised about this year's cohort.

It was yet to work out the finer details of the graduation ceremony, but it would ensure student's confidentiality, the university said.

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