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Examination Board Sues Medical Physicians for Cheating
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Amednews.com REPORT HERE that "the American Board of Internal Medicine has sanctioned 139 physicians for allegedly exchanging test questions from the board's certification exam.  Five physicians also face complaints filed by the board in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. The board is claiming copyright infringement, misappropriation of trade secrets and breach of contract.
The board's actions come five months after the organization sued Arora Board Review and its owners, claiming copyright infringement and theft of trade secrets. The 139 sanctioned physicians had participated in an exam preparation course offered by the New Jersey-based company and had disclosed to Arora officials actual board questions."

"ABIM president and chief executive officer, said board staff first learned of problems about a year ago, when they found copyrighted exam questions on Arora's website. The ABIM ultimately removed hundreds of compromised questions from its exam....At the Arora Board Review courses, [the manager] was not only bragging that he had ABIM questions but soliciting people who remembered questions to report them back to him."

"Humayun Chaudhry, DO, president and chief executive officer of the Federation of State Medical Boards, said physicians bring "disrepute" on the profession by exchanging board exam questions. 'Cheating on a board certification exam is a serious matter which calls into question a physician's character,' he said.  Dr. Chaudhry said he believes this is the largest case of organized physician misconduct. State licensing boards may choose to take further action. 'It could call into question the validity of their medical license,' Dr. Chaudhry said."

"The 139 physicians sanctioned by the ABIM were notified June 9. Their penalties include revocation of board certification or suspension of certification for one to five years, depending on the severity of the offense. Some noncertified physicians involved will have to wait a year or more before seeking certification."

"Physicians can appeal the board's decision within about two months, after which the ABIM will begin notifying state medical licensing boards of its actions..."

"The ABIM plans to send warning letters to more than 1,000 other physicians who took the course and didn't report [the] instructors' claims that they provided access to actual ABIM questions."

 
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U.S. government overpaid private insurance companies administering Medicare Advantage plans by as much as $3.1 billion in 2010, according to a new report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO).

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