The Institutional Shield: Why Hospitals Protect Incompetent Staff
The shared dynamic highlights a critical flaw within highly structured, high-pressure professional environments like public hospital systems: the management vacuum of rotational staff and the perverse incentives of performance appraisals.
1. The Rotational Blind Spot
When temporary or rotating doctors show signs of severe misconduct (e.g., hiding in consultation rooms for hours, leaving the shift unexpectedly), the permanent staff often chooses silent resentment over formal complaints. This is a pragmatic, albeit cynical, calculation of opportunity cost. If a problematic colleague is scheduled to rotate out in a few weeks, filing a formal complaint creates more immediate paperwork and administrative friction for the team than simply absorbing their workload temporarily.
2. Perverse Incentives: Appraising the "瘟神" (The Liabilities)
The most striking revelation is how the grading system historically penalized honesty. If a Clinical Oncology Service (COS) or Medical Officer (MO) gave a failing grade to a houseman, the legacy policy mandated that the failing trainee remain in that exact department for an extended period.
This created a system where the most rational move for a busy department was to pass incompetent trainees just to transfer the liability to the next specialty.
3. The New Policy Dilemma
Even as modern adjustments shift failed trainees back to academic teaching hospitals, new systemic anxieties emerge. If giving a failing grade risks a counter-complaint from the trainee that could reduce the department’s future allocation of junior doctors, the incentive to "blindly pass" underperforming staff remains strong. Ultimately, in a chronically understaffed healthcare system, the immediate survival of the remaining team will almost always override the long-term goal of weeding out inadequate professionals.