RUSSELL v. EDUCATIONAL COMMISSION FOR FOREIGN MEDICAL GRADUATES

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 19, 2022
Docket2:18-cv-05629
StatusUnknown

This text of RUSSELL v. EDUCATIONAL COMMISSION FOR FOREIGN MEDICAL GRADUATES (RUSSELL v. EDUCATIONAL COMMISSION FOR FOREIGN MEDICAL GRADUATES) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RUSSELL v. EDUCATIONAL COMMISSION FOR FOREIGN MEDICAL GRADUATES, (E.D. Pa. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

MONIQUE RUSSELL, et al., Case No. 2:18-cv-05629-JDW Plaintiffs,

v.

EDUCATIONAL COMMISSION FOR FOREIGN MEDICAL GRADUATES,

Defendant.

MEMORANDUM Memories are a tricky thing. Once an event happens, it has happened. There is no changing what occurred. But a person’s memories of those events are not nearly as static. What someone remembers one day is not necessarily the same as what she remembers the next. Sometimes memories fade, and precise details are lost to the ether. Other times, social mores or a person’s belief system evolves or changes, causing her to reassess her memories. And still other times, a person learns new information that causes her to remember events differently, either by filling in gaps in her memory or by viewing them in an entirely different light. The Plaintiffs in this case learned that their obstetrician was not who he claimed. He did not graduate from medical school, and his identity was false. That information came as a shock, and it has caused them to reassess their memories of the treatment that they received from this “doctor.” And that reassessment has caused them emotional distress for which they seek to hold the Educational Commission For Foreign Medical Graduates (“ECFMG”) liable. Their claims test the outer limits of the tort of negligent infliction of emotional distress (“NIED”). As explained below, the Court concludes that their claims stretch that tort too far. They cannot maintain their claims against ECFMG, so the Court will grant ECFMG’s motion for summary judgment. I. BACKGROUND A. Factual Background

1. ECFMG certification ECFMG certifies that international medical graduates (“IMGs”) graduated from a recognized foreign institution, demonstrate English-language proficiency, and pass the first two steps of the United States Medical Licensing Examination. IMGs can use an ECFMG certification to apply to residency and other graduate medical education programs and to apply for state medical licenses. ECFMG also investigates what it calls “irregular behavior.” If ECFMG receives an allegation of irregular behavior, it reviews the allegation and

determines whether sufficient evidence supports the charge. If so, ECFMG notifies the applicant of the allegation and permits him to submit a written explanation or other evidence. The applicant may request a hearing and hire legal counsel. Then, ECFMG determines whether, by a preponderance of the evidence, the applicant engaged in the irregular behavior. ECFMG may revoke its certification, but it does not have to do so. In all cases where ECFMG determines there was irregular behavior, ECFMG will add a note in the IMG’s ECFMG record. 2. IMGs’ medical practice in the United States To practice medicine in the United States, an IMG must complete additional steps beyond an ECFMG certification. An IMG may apply to a residency program, and those programs typically consider in-person interviews, information provided by the IMG, letters of recommendation, skills assessments and additional examinations, medical school transcripts, ECFMG certification, and a background

check to evaluate IMGs. During residency, a residency program supervises and evaluates residents with progress reports and exams, among other things. To get licensed, an IMG must also apply for licensure with the state licensing board. In Maryland, the Maryland State Board of Physicians requires ECFMG certification, completion of three medical licensing exams, good moral character, and completion of two years of an accredited residency program. IMGs may also seek hospital staff privileges. Each hospital has its own application. Typically, hospitals interview applicants and review several things,

including ECFMG certification, personal reference contacts, certificates of residency completion, letters of recommendation from program directors, a Social Security number, a valid passport or birth certificate, a background check, and a drug screen. Hospitals also conduct ongoing reviews of a physician’s clinical performance, demeanor, and interactions with patients. 3. Mr. Igberase aka Mr. Akoda In April 1992, Oluwafemi Charles Igberase applied to ECFMG for certification, claiming that he graduated from medical school in Nigeria. ECFMG issued him a

certificate. Despite the certificate, no residency program admitted him. In March 1994, Mr. Igberase submitted a second application to ECFMG for certification. This time, he used a false date of birth and a different name: Igberase Oluwafemi Charles. ECFMG approved this second application. ECFMG later determined that Mr. Igberase fraudulently applied for two ECFMG certifications under two different names and revoked each certification. In 1996, Mr. Igberase applied to ECFMG using a fake passport and yet

another name: John Charles Akoda. ECFMG certified Mr. Akoda in August 1997. In 1998, Jersey Shore Medical Center (“JSMC”) admitted Mr. Akoda to its internal medicine residency program. In August 2000, JSMC asked ECFMG to investigate Mr. Akoda because JSMC learned that he might have served as a resident in two other U.S. residency programs under the name “Igberase.” ECFMG began an investigation. Mr. Igberase1 disputed the JSMC allegations. In 2000, JSMC discharged Mr. Igberase due to discrepancies between his Social Security number and green card. ECFMG continued to investigate but took no adverse action

because it concluded there was insufficient evidence of irregular behavior. In 2006, Mr. Igberase applied for a residency at Howard University Hospital, using the Akoda identity and a false permanent residency card. He completed the program in 2011. That same year, he applied for and received medical licenses in Maryland and Virginia. He also used the Akoda identity to apply for and receive admitting privileges at Prince George’s Hospital Center in Maryland. For his Maryland license and hospital application, he submitted a fake permanent resident

1 The Court will refer to Mr. Igberase as “Mr. Igberase,” even though he was using the “Akoda” identity. card and a false Maryland driver’s license. At Prince George’s Hospital Center, Mr. Igberase worked with patients from medical practices run by Drs. Abdul Chaudry and Javaka Moore. The American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology certified Mr. Igberase on January 31, 2014. On June 9, 2016, law enforcement executed search warrants concerning Mr. Igberase and discovered fraudulent or altered documents, including medical

diplomas, transcripts, and letters of recommendation. He signed a plea agreement admitting to misuse of a Social Security number. ECFMG revoked the certification it had issued to him. After his sentencing, Prince George’s Hospital Center terminated his medical privileges, and the Maryland Board of Physicians revoked his license. 4. Plaintiffs’ knowledge of and treatment with Mr. Igberase The four named Plaintiffs—Monique Russell, Jasmine Riggins, Elsa Powell, and Desire Evans—each received medical treatment from Mr. Igberase at Prince George’s Hospital Center. Mr. Igberase treated Ms. Riggins beginning in August

2012, and he performed unplanned emergency caesarean-section surgery on Ms. Riggins in March 2013 and Ms. Russell in May 2016.2 He treated Ms. Powell regularly beginning in April 2014, delivered her child in September 2014, and provided post- natal care through January 2015. He delivered Ms. Evans’s child via caesarean- section surgery in March 2016. Some of the Plaintiffs allege that during treatment he performed inappropriate examinations of a sexual nature while utilizing

2 At one point during her deposition Ms. Russell said that Mr. Igberase delivered her child in 2017, but Plaintiffs admit the child was delivered in 2016. inappropriate and explicit sexual language. None of them knew that Mr.

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