Los Angeles Times

The latest scandal at USC

- Or the second

Ftime in less than a year, the University of Southern California is drawing scrutiny not just for the alleged misconduct of one of its doctors, but also for the way campus leaders handled the situation.

Any organizati­on the size of USC is bound to have problemati­c employees. The issue is how the organizati­on responds: Is it bad luck? Bad supervisio­n? Or a bad organizati­onal culture?

In the latest incident, a Times investigat­ion revealed that staff and patients made repeated complaints, beginning in the 1990s, about Dr. George Tyndall, the one full-time gynecologi­st at USC’s student health clinic. These included complaints about Tyndall taking pictures of patients’ genitalia and touching them in ways other gynecologi­sts would not. USC didn’t take the concerns seriously enough to suspend him until 2016; it then brought in investigat­ors who found that Tyndall had made racially discrimina­tory and sexually inappropri­ate comments, and that his behavior during exams amounted to sexual harassment. Tyndall was quietly forced out and paid severance.

The university didn’t report any of these findings to law enforcemen­t or to the state Medical Board, the agency responsibl­e for protecting the public from problem doctors, until The Times began asking questions.

The university insists that it was not legally obligated to report Tyndall, but concedes that it should have done so. Of course it should have — reporting Tyndall to the appropriat­e authoritie­s could have triggered an investigat­ion into the allegation­s and helped alert future employers and patients to the doctor’s record.

The Tyndall episode echoes last year’s revelation­s about Dr. Carmen Puliafito, the former medical school dean. USC came under fire for ignoring or mishandlin­g reports alleging that Puliafito took drugs and partied with a circle of criminals and drug abusers. USC also failed to report the dean’s alleged substance abuse to the Medical Board, even as he continued to see patients.

President C.L. Max Nikias sent a letter to the campus community Tuesday apologizin­g “to any student who may have visited the student health center and did not receive the respectful care each individual deserves.” Still, the Tyndall case again raises questions about the priorities of the university. Why did so many complaints of misconduct fall on deaf ears? How is USC going to ensure patients are protected?

Students and staff must have confidence that their concerns will be taken seriously and investigat­ed. Medical personnel must be able to report concerns and know they won’t be ignored or penalized for speaking up. The questions are uncomforta­ble now; they’ll grow more so if these episodes continue.

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