It’s no doubt reassuring to the public that most states require doctors and lawyers to complete a specified number of hours of “continuing professional education” each year, ostensibly to keep their skills up to date. That sense of reassurance might fade, though, if laymen paid attention to what kind of courses are available to meet the CPE requirement. In Washington State, Sound Politics reports, Bush-hating psychiatrists can get six hours of credit for “Politics, Justice, and Psyche: LIVING WITH THE AMERICAN ELECTION of 2004”, designed for “Professionals in Psychotherapy, Medicine, Law, Education and Religion” who are “Struggling to contain personal feelings oscillating from outrage to sorrow” over President Bush’s reelection.
The combination of left-wing psychological fragility and unintelligently designed CPE standards created this opportunity for purveyors of psychobabble. It’s far from the only example of CPE with a tenuous relationship to professional skills. A while ago, I noted that lawyers in Tennessee could get 14 hours of credit last year for listening to promoters of Shakespearean authorship theories.
There ought to be a mini-scandal here. Right now, so far as I can discern, CPE is largely a racket that does little good for either public or professionals. Perhaps it can be turned into a useful exercise, though I’m rather dubious. If not, it ought to be seen for what it is – a tax on medical and legal services for the benefit of low quality educators – and abolished.
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