Tinner v. District of Columbia Department of Consumer & Regulatory Affairs

703 A.2d 833, 1997 D.C. App. LEXIS 273, 1997 WL 759644
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 1997
Docket96-AA-1017
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 703 A.2d 833 (Tinner v. District of Columbia Department of Consumer & Regulatory Affairs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Tinner v. District of Columbia Department of Consumer & Regulatory Affairs, 703 A.2d 833, 1997 D.C. App. LEXIS 273, 1997 WL 759644 (D.C. 1997).

Opinions

BELSON, Senior Judge:

Petitioner, Reginald Tinner, M.D., seeks review of a 1996 order of the District of Columbia Board of Medicine (“Board”) denying, for the second time, his 1990 application to practice medicine in the District of Columbia. The Board’s denial of Dr. Tinner’s application followed a hearing ordered by this court, which had remanded the Board’s initial denial of Dr. Tinner’s application “for further consideration and explanation of the apparent different treatment of pre-1985 and post-1985 FLEX examinees by requiring a ‘single sitting’ for pre-1985 examinees.”1 Tinner v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs, No. 93-AA-1014, at 2 (D.C. June 27, 1995) (order remanding) (“Tinner I ”). We affirm.

I.

Dr. Tinner sat for the FLEX national licensing examination on three separate occasions after completing medical school abroad. In December of 1975, he received scores of 65 in basic science, 72.5 in clinical science, and 69.1 in clinical competence, for a weighted average of 69.6.2 In June of 1976, Dr. Tinner sat for the New Hampshire FLEX, and received scores of 70 in basic science, 77.3 in clinical science, and 67.3 in clinical competence, resulting in a weighted average score of 71.1. Thereafter, in December of 1976, Dr. Tinner again sat for the New Hampshire FLEX, taking only the Day I, basic science, and Day III, clinical competence sections of the examination and receiving scores of 70.3 and 81.2 on the respective sections. Under New Hampshire regulations, Dr. Tinner was not required to sit for the Day II, clinical science, portion of the examination since he had previously received in it a grade in excess of 75 on the June, 1976, examination. By combining the June, 1976, clinical science score with the December, 1976, basic science and clinical competence scores, New Hampshire calculated a passing weighted average score of 78.08, and granted Dr. Tinner a license.

Dr. Tinner was subsequently licensed to practice medicine in the state of New York in 1977, New Jersey in 1979, and Maryland in 1991. He began a family practice in Atlantic City, New Jersey, in 1979 and eventually submitted an application for licensure in the District which came before the Board on December 4, 1991. He based his application upon his having passed the FLEX as administered in the state of New Hampshire in 1976. By order dated July 14, 1993, the Board denied Dr. Tinner’s application be[835]*835cause he failed to meet the “single sitting” requirement for pre-1985 FLEX applicants. Dr. Tinner petitioned this court for review.

Upon reviewing the Board’s decision, this court concluded initially that the Board’s decision revealed “no meaningful or thoughtful explanation or rationale for why there is a ‘single sitting1 requirement for pre-1985 FLEX applicants and not for post-1985 FLEX applicants.” Tinner I, supra, No. 93-AA-1014, at 1. The court, therefore, remanded the case for further consideration and explanation of the disparate treatment between the two groups of applicants.

II.

On remand, the Board supplemented the record with additional documentation concerning the differing treatment given pre-1985 as contrasted with post-1985 FLEX examinees, and again denied Dr. Tinner li-censure in the District. We will summarize the Board’s additional documentation.

A.FLEX Handbook

The Board provided information from the Purpose, Procedure and Policy of the Federation Licensing Examination (“FLEX Handbook”) publication produced by the Federation for Boards of Medical Examiners.3 In the “Policy” section of the FLEX Handbook, the Federation noted that the only way a FLEX weighted average (“FWA”) will be computed is by averaging the scores of Day I, II, and III of the same examination; otherwise, a FWA will not be computed. In the event of reexamination, no FWA could be computed by the Federation unless the applicant took a total reexamination of all three days. FLEX Handbook, supra, n. 3, at 9, 10. The Flex Handbook further provided that:

A pick-and-ehoose mechanism (scrambling) across multiple examinations utilizing only the highest grades, whether re-examined or otherwise, and whether by the same or different states, is admittedly a prerogative of the individual state medical board but can result in serious endorsement difficulties on the part of the licentiate. The FLEX Board, therefore, urges that if such a procedure be practiced by an individual state board, a clear statement to the individual be made pointing out that the license so received may well be non-endorsi-ble [sic], thus avoiding undue hardship upon the individual through no fault of his own. The FLEX Board strongly recommends against this type of procedure.

Id. at 10 (emphasis in original).

B. Article by Dr. Lloyd R. Evans

In addition, the Board included in the record a 1976 article written by Dr. Lloyd R. Evans, former chair of the FLEX Clinical Sciences Committee. In this article, entitled “Flex Examination Problems,” Dr. Evans discussed some of the difficulties that arose from the FLEX framework, one recurring problem being the mixing (i.e., scrambling) of grades from different examinations to achieve a passing score on the FLEX. See Lloyd R. Evans, M.D., FLEX Examination Problems, FEDERATION Bulletin, June 1976, 166, 173-75. Dr. Evans further noted that the policy of the FLEX Board and Test Committee was that scores from different examinations not be scrambled to achieve a passing score. Id. at 174-75. The rationales he identified were the prevention of possible confusion on the part of the licensee and the maintenance of the integrity “of the licensure laws which are for the protection of the patient.” Id. at 175.

C. The New FLEX Program

Also provided in the record is documentation concerning the current FLEX examination, which was introduced in June of 1985. The document explained various ways in which the current FLEX (i.e., post-1985 FLEX) differed from the pre-1985 FLEX, a most notable difference being that the current FLEX consists of two components as contrasted with the three subject areas characteristic of the pre-1985 FLEX. See FEDERATION of State Medical Boakds, New FLEX PROGRAM (1984). Additionally, the two com[836]*836ponents comprising the post-1985 FLEX were designed in such a way that each component is graded separately and a passing score has to be obtained for each component. Id. at 8. The component scores are no longer combined to compute a weighted average score.4

D. The 1995-96 Exchange

Lastly, the Board supplemented the record with a publication by the Federation entitled Exchange. Provided in Exchange is information indicating that thirty-one jurisdictions, including the District, follow the Federation’s recommendation regarding the pre-1985 FLEX. See FEDERATION of State Medical BOARDS OF THE U.S., INC., EXCHANGE 66-67 (1995-96) (table indicating requirements for licensure by endorsement). Thus, thirty-one jurisdictions mandate that an applicant who seeks licensure based on his pre-1985 FLEX score have passed the FLEX in a single sitting, while nineteen have no such single-sitting requirement. Id.5

III.

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