The change is necessary because under the 31-year-old existing system, "program requirements have become prescriptive, and opportunities for innovation have progressively disappeared," write ACGME CEO Thomas Nasca and co-authors in the New England Journal of Medicine. "As administrative burdens have grown, program directors have been forced to manage programs rather than mentor residents." The new system, however, will aim to "take the best of the current system and [enhance] it with a more explicit focus on attributes of the learning environment that carry over into a lifetime of practice in a clinical specialty."
Beryl Benderly: February 2012
The change is necessary because under the 31-year-old existing system, "program requirements have become prescriptive, and opportunities for innovation have progressively disappeared," write ACGME CEO Thomas Nasca and co-authors in the New England Journal of Medicine. "As administrative burdens have grown, program directors have been forced to manage programs rather than mentor residents." The new system, however, will aim to "take the best of the current system and [enhance] it with a more explicit focus on attributes of the learning environment that carry over into a lifetime of practice in a clinical specialty."
February 28, 2012
Who Watches the Watchers?
Continue reading: Who Watches the Watchers?.
We have belatedly learned that the Washington Post's "Fact Checker" column has examined the president's claims about the employment situation in engineering and given him One Pinocchio for his comments to Mrs. Wedel. The Post's Pinocchio Scale ranges from one Pinocchio for "Some shading of the facts. Selective telling of the truth. Some omissions and exaggerations, but no outright falsehoods." The Post awards four Pinocchios for "whoppers."
The employment outlook in the semiconductor industry, where Mr. Wedel worked, looks "bleak heading into 2020, and the president should have known that," the Fact Checker writes. The president earned his Pinocchio "for suggesting that demand remains high for engineers in high-tech industries. He can't gloss over this area of unemployment."
February 24, 2012
A "Lesson Learned"--But This Time, Thankfully, Not the Hard Way
Entitled "Lesson Learned, UC Davis Chemistry Event, Oxygen Bomb Calorimeter Failure," the report attributes the explosion most probably to the failure of a valve seat within the calorimeter. The manufacturer, the report states, "recommends that all O-rings and valve seats be replaced annually or after 5000 firings....With proper maintenance, these particular calorimeters can operate safely and accurately for decades." The machine's serial number "indicates that it was manufactured in 1985," but "there are no records of routine maintenance" of the device however.
A 1985 manufacture date does make the calorimeter 23 years younger than the lathe that killed undergraduate physics student Michele Dufault at Yale University in April 2011, which had also apparently gone decades without servicing. Of course it's possible, perhaps even likely, that the O-rings and valve seats may have been replaced at some point during the now-defunct calorimeter's 27-year life. The lack of records, however, makes a proper maintenance schedule highly unlikely.
The "lesson" that those responsible for labs at UC Davis and many other universities need to learn from this incident--or re-learn after the unnecessary death of Dufault--is that servicing equipment in a timely manner is a potentially life-and-death responsibility. The fact that the academic science world doesn't have once again to express shock and sorrow over yet another needless death or injury following this incident is pretty much a matter of luck rather than anything the university did to assure safety.
February 21, 2012
Using Job Interviews to Your Advantage
Continue reading: Using Job Interviews to Your Advantage.
February 17, 2012
A Portal to Scientific Careers in the Federal Government
For many job seekers, the complexity and apparent opacity of the federal hiring process can pose a challenge. To help orient scientists to the often unfamiliar federal job market, a number of agencies have joined forces in a Web site called INSPIRE that is aimed specifically at answering scientists' questions about whether and how to seek a position with the feds. Its features include interviews with federally employed scientists, engineers, and technologists working in a number of fields as well as links that explain how federal hiring works, what federal employment offers, how to find agencies that want your skills, and where to get additional information.
The union also helped individual postdocs resolve issues involving back pay, vacation time, attempts to terminate postdoc appointments because of pregnancy, and other instances of unwarranted termination, the website continues. Advocacy efforts included pressing the California Congressional delegation to oppose cuts to research funding and to support comprehensive immigration reform.
February 15, 2012
University of Sydney Student's Injuries Less Severe than Reported
An investigation into the cause of the incident is underway, Warr continues, and should "be finalized in a few days." Warr offered to provide additional information after the investigation is complete.
February 13, 2012
Student Seriously Injured in University of Sydney Lab Explosion
Burns over 40 percent of the victim's body sounds eerily reminiscent of the lab fire injuries that killed Sheri Sangji in 2009. Here's hoping that this student makes a good recovery.
February 13, 2012
Getting the Best Letters of Recommendations
The key strategic issue is selecting the right people to ask to write your letters, a task Blattman suggests you approach with "seriousness and care." "Strong letters usually come from long and close relationships with faculty," he explains. But writing them is far from trivial from the faculty member's point of view. "Since we often write these letters to our colleagues in the same pool of colleges and employers," professors "take [writing] these letters seriously." After all, "our reputations are at stake."
The essay covers such points as the criteria faculty members use to decide whom to write letters for, the number of writers an applicant should seek, and the etiquette of making the task as easy as possible for the faculty member and of providing the information he or she will need to give the most favorable possible account of your qualifications. You can find Blattman's thoughtful advice here.
February 8, 2012
Senator Grassley Writes to President Obama About Mrs. Wedel
Continue reading: Senator Grassley Writes to President Obama About Mrs. Wedel.
Now the New York Times reports that the potential payoff of "groundbreaking research" has sparked a lawsuit by a University of Pennsylvania cancer institute against the president of the Memorial Sloane-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City. Penn's Abramson Family Cancer Research Institute alleges that Craig B. Thompson "chose to abscond with the fruits" of work he did while at Penn. Thompson denies the accusation.
The article calls the tangle between the prestigious institution and the major researcher a "billion-dollar dispute" and gives other examples of the big bucks at stake in certain struggles over the ownership of research.
Continue reading: Penn Institute Sues Prestigious Researcher Over Work It Claims Was Taken.
February 6, 2012
Even More on the President and Mrs. Wedel
Though it's said here in Washington that the two ends of the political spectrum can't agree on what day of the week it is, these two articles have a lot in common. Where Salon speaks of "Obama's high-tech labor lies," NRO cites the "phony 'missile-gap' style panic about U.S. competitiveness created by lobbyists for tech companies that desire cheap labor."
Right and left seeing nearly eye-to-eye on an important issue? You heard it here first!
Continue reading: Even More on the President and Mrs. Wedel.
Continue reading: After Explosion, Texas Tech Committee Aims to Make Safety "Automatic".
February 6, 2012
More on the President and Mrs. Wedel
(PS. I, like a number of other writers, have misspelled the Wedel's name. My apologies.)
Continue reading: More on the President and Mrs. Wedel.
