Power imbalance makes medical students vulnerable to abuse: ethicist - Action News
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Manitoba

Power imbalance makes medical students vulnerable to abuse: ethicist

Medical students are sometimes powerless if they try to speak up against their superiors, a university ethicist says, after a Winnipeg oncologist was disciplined because of "flagrantly unprofessional" intimate relationships that he pursued with two students.

Students believe residency programs, career prospects are at stake if they speak up

A close-up picture of a doctor with a lab coat and stethoscope.
With careers at stake, medical students might decide to keep silent rather than report a superior for wrongdoing, a university ethicist believes. (Shutterstock)

Medical students are sometimes powerless if they try to speak up against theirsuperiors, a universityethicist says, aftera Winnipeg oncologist was disciplined because of "flagrantly unprofessional" intimate relationships that he pursued with two students.

"Basically, your entire future depends on the evaluations of the people who are directly above you," saidBrendanLeier, a professor atthe University of Alberta'sDossetor Health Ethics Centre.

"There'snot a medical school in Canada that doesn't have processes to vet complaints and things like that, on paper, but in the real world these are grave, grave issues," he said. "Ifyou leave a residency program, is it possible to get into another one? It's highly unlikely."

That reluctance sealed the lips of one student, described as X in the decision by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Manitoba's inquiry board. X'smentorship with Dr. Gary Allan Joseph Harding progressed to conversations of a sexual nature and inappropriate sexual touching, beginning in 2012.

X disclosed the improper relationship to a counsellor in 2013, who urged him many times to report it, but he was hesitant because of worrieshiscareer would be jeopardized if he spoke out.

He refused to name the faculty member when he later met the associate dean of student affairs in response to his "significant academic issues" in late 2014 and disclosed the relationship.

Student comes forward

Days later, Xwas asked directly if Harding was the perpetrator, which he confirmed.

His disclosure triggered the university's investigation and, upon learning this, Harding resignedin June 2015.

Soon thereafter, CancerCare Manitoba, an affiliate of the faculty, terminated his employment.

Harding has not practised or taught medicine in Manitoba or any other jurisdiction since 2015, the college reported.

In a decision that was made public this week, the inquiry panel ruledHarding wasguilty of professional misconduct. Harding was found to have initiated unwanted sexual contact, providedgifts and offeredinvitations to his home.

The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Manitoba suspended Dr. Gary Allan Joseph Harding for six months for his misconduct involving a pair of University of Manitoba medical students. (CBC)

The decision bars Harding frompractising medicine for six months and he must pay $125,000 in investigation costs. He can only regain his licence if he undergoes "rigorous and specific" evaluation, thepanel ruled.

Leier said students are almost compelled to silence when a career in the medical profession something they've spent years working toward is at stake.

"Although medical students are treated sometimes, and perceived sometimes, as entitled elites, they're in an incredibly vulnerable situation."

He said amentorship is vital to students who want to find success.

"It's from your mentor that you learn the art of medicine, and not the factual science."

Another student, described in the ruling as Y, tried to push back in early 2014when he told Harding he wanted to remain his mentee and friend, but did not want to sleep over. Harding became angryafter hearing this.

During previous sleepovers, Y reported, he awoke to find Harding's hand on his genitals.

The sleepoverswould continue until Y'smedical placement took him out of the city.

The report says Harding eventually harassed Y to the point, in late 2014,where he threatened the student with a citation that he claimedwould ruin his professional reputation. Y hired a lawyer to make the harassment stop.

Faculty members often forget that they are notpsychiatrists-Naomi Levine, a retired Winnipeg lawyer

Naomi Levine, a retired Winnipeg lawyer who helped theUniversity of Manitoba develop itsapproach to sexual harassment complaints, said professors mustdiscourage friendly relationships with their students that might become something inappropriate.

She said some students have an expectation of a friendlyrelationship, which facultyare sometimes inclinedto match.

"Faculty members often forget that they are not psychiatrists. They are not the peoplewho deal with the emotions, feelings, the sensitivities, the domestic lives of their students. They are there to teach them," she said.

Jazz professor Steve Kirby was fired from his position at Boston's Berklee College once his harassment allegations at the University of Manitoba were made public. (umanitoba.ca)

The University of Manitoba has been criticizedfor its handling of sexual misconduct complaints after former jazz professor Steve Kirby quietly retired from the institution last year after an internal investigation was kept under wraps.

The Berklee College of Music later hired Kirby after speaking with individuals at the U of M, who provided "uniformly positive"references.Kirby was promptly fired by the Boston-based college when it became aware of the allegations.

Levine said students must have clear pathways to report wrongdoings to senior personnel or authorities.

And they shouldn't have to worry that faculty members will bind together rather than point fingers at one of their own, she said.

Leieragrees, saying untoward behaviour such as Harding'sundermines the credibility of their profession.

University response

The University of Manitoba'sRadyFaculty of Health Sciencesdid not commentspecificallyon the allegations against Harding, but said it is committed to providing various mechanisms for students to report misconduct, including an anonymous online reporting tool.

"We are committed to supporting individuals who disclose and building a culture of safety, respect, consent, prevention and education," the school said.

Winnipeg police would not say whether they're investigating the allegations outlined in the decision, but said a report from a college is enough to initiate a preliminary investigation.

CancerCareManitoba's own investigationconcluded that no patients were adversely affected.

NeilMcArthur, directorof the Centre for Professional and Applied Ethics at the U of M, hopes Harding's violations are a wake-up call.

"This is happeningtoo often, I'll put that bluntly," he said. "There are too many of these boundary violations, inappropriate relationships or outright harassments happening in academics."

With files by Marianne Klowak, Leif Larsen, Ismaila Alfa