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I bet the school settles with them and gives them a payout. |
So you believe she made up the whole instagram thing from thin air? That is preposterous. Unfortunately for him, he apparently didn't know the nurse patient didn't have screenshots or proof, because he confessed there was instagram engagement. It's just that he spun it as initiated by her. Do you also believe he realized merely following her was wrong or did the pending follow request (and note?) linger (i.e. ignored by her) and he regretted what he wrote? You do also realize if you have someone's name - like say they were your patient an hour ago! - you can find them in two seconds by searching said name on instagram? She didn't have to give him any instagram "info." That is his version. All in all his story doesn't quite add up. And if and when you're busted serially lying from the outset of such an academic investigation, that's when they can throw the book at you. |
That's fine. But their process seems designed to have the accused fail before the investigation. That's not fair. |
Any evidence he Google'd or tried to call the crisis center? He allegedly volunteered for years at a 24/7 suicide hotline. He could have called it. |
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I don’t think people read the information that was linked in the news article.
The patient came to the appointment and the med student interviewed her alone first and took the initial assessment. She didn’t feel comfortable with some of the questions he was asking. When the med student asked if he could do the Pap smear for training purposes, the patient said no. He asked if he could observe and she agreed. So the actual pap was done by a female while the med student watched. After the appointment ended the patient got a request to follow her on Instagram with a message that made her feel “uncomfortable”. There is a photo of the request but the message was deleted when he later blocked/unfollowed her. Because the patient had to have a follow up appointment two weeks later she contacted the clinic stating she did not want to interact with online or in person during her next visit. |
| And when the medical student was interviewed he admitted that patient looked nervous, he showed the patient a picture of his girlfriend, discussed their significant others with her, told her she had “nice abs”, and admitted after the appointment that he followed her on Instagram. |
Her account on page two of that file in the article makes zero mention she gave him her instagram handle. She claims he tried to follow her "very soon" after she left the clinic. And reading between the lines, during her examination, her "nervousness" and looking back and forth at him and the female NP was sounds like a meek girl using non-verbal communication to get the NP to tell the creep to leave the room. You ask for a female to perform your pap, yet the creepy male stays in the room to watch. How mortifying. |
"Nervous," more like creeped the eff out by him. |
The NP gave him an "exceeds expectations" rating for the day. |
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Parents already in the Indian press claiming bias and that the school made their son kill himself.
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/us/our-son-was-forced-to-end-life-parents-of-indian-medical-student-vaibhav-duggal-accuse-texas-tech-university-of-bias/amp_articleshow/126614722.cms |
NP wasn't privy to the allegedly creepy dialogue before she entered the room. Nor him following the patient on instagram right after she left. And at the end of the day, NPs are box checking and are never going to rock the boat and get tied up in some disciplinary hearing drama. I also find it really unprofessional that a girl patient can request a female professional and the default isn't for the male to leave the room. The NP let him lurk in there, then asked the girl in front of him if he could stay. That's an unbelievably awkward position to be in. The default should be the guy has to leave the room first, then the female NP could ask if the patient minds if he re-enters to observe. |
This falls flat. It appears the campus crisis center has a 24/7 hotline he could have called (a resource he would have known about as a volunteer). It also appears the crisis center opened Tuesday at 8 a.m., hours before be purchased the firearm. Monday, July 28: 10 p.m., in bed with girlfriend, restless and couldn’t fall asleep. Monday, July 28: 11:36 p.m, admin email received. Tuesday, July 29: 10:27 a.m., purchased a gun. Tuesday, July 29, 2 p.m., crossed state lines, put on his white coat, and taken his own life. Is there such a thing as a campus crisis center being open 24/7 fully staffed with psychologists and therapists? I highly doubt it. |
| The school can't win. If they put him in a psych hold, the family would have probably sued for that too. A psych hold in theory may have saved his life but would have delayed graduation. |
| Anyone know if the patient filed a formal complaint or merely her calling and requesting to simply not be seen by him triggered some sort of automatic internal complaint? |
Why is that relevant? El Paso is on the border with New Mexico. Just means someone drove a mile up I-10 into New Mexico. |