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#51 |
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1K Member
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#52 |
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Senior Member
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I don't smoke, but I don't think marijuana use during one's personal time when he/she is free of all clinical responsibility is deplorable. There's no lingering effect that will carry on to the next day, and marijuana isn't considered an addictive substance. You can stop smoking pot cold-turkey and won't experience withdrawal symptoms like you would with alcohol. I think this back-and-forth arguing between attending and pre-med/med student is due to a generational gap. Marijuana use has become increasingly mainstream and, as Mr. Naylor touched on, it's only a matter of time before it's universally legalized.
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MD Class of 2016 |
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#53 | |
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Senior Member
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#54 |
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Banned
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[QUOTE=FutureCTDoc;12462428]But something being stupid doesn't mean it should be illegal. It's stupid to go biking without a helmet, but it's not illegal. Legality doesn't fundamentally change the ultimate issue whether an action is right or wrong. The best way to view whether an action is right or wrong is to ask does it involve the use of force or fraud and does it cause harm to others. Marijuana use doesn't seem to meet that.[/QUOTE]
There are helmet laws, seatbelt laws and you will get a ticket if you dont wear them. Using an illegal substance that impairs/ potentially impairs you is a breech in professional standard not comparable to wearing/ not wearing safety equipment. |
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#55 |
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Senior Member
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Have you ever knowingly broken a law?
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#56 |
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Member
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This!
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#57 |
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Chillaxin
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I don't think we're arguing the ethics here. It's a fairly black or white issue. Using illicit substances (regardless of how benign they are) is illegal. You put your medical school education, career, and license at stake depending on what part of the course you're at.
Is alcohol more destructive than marijuana? Yes. Is that relevent when discussing legality? No, unless you're the lawmaker who will introduce and get legislation passed to change the legal status. This isn't the same as jaywalking, speeding, etc. None of those actions, if not directly affecting your ability to practice, will affect your practice potential in the future unless there is an escalation of outstanding offenses. There is no way to predict when a school will test you. I wouldn't rely on precedent with such potentially grave consequences. There is no way to predict when a clerkship site will test you. There's no reason to be playing Russian roulette. If you must relax, do it legally and have nothing to worry about. |
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#58 | |
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1K Member
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[QUOTE=sirenomelia;12462487]
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NSU CLAS Class Of 2013 NSU-COM Class Of 2017 If you're going to tell people the truth, you better make them laugh; otherwise they'll kill you. George Bernard Shaw |
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#59 |
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1K Member
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#60 | |
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Banned
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#61 | |
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4K Member
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You really mean all of this, don't you? I thought you were a masterful troll for the last three months, but I'm starting to realize exactly how insane you are.
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Let's not and say we didn't. |
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#62 |
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Has an MD in Horribleness
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MJ use is exactly the same as speeding. Both actions are equally illegal. They have comparable legal and social consequences. You are knowingly breaking the law in both cases. And neither one affects your ability to practice medicine (assuming you're not actually high at work). There is no reason why you should be fine with a history of speeding and judgmental about a history of recreational drug use.
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#63 |
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Has an MD in Horribleness
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Nvm
Last edited by Perrotfish; 05-01-2012 at 01:20 PM. |
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#64 | |
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Senior Member
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or you havn't read them? educate yourself, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8776790 edit: this is more a response to "weed is bad because of performance, but sleep deprivation is not bad even though its bad for performance too" argument. I don't know specifically about studies looking at affects of those new rules. |
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#65 | |
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Chillaxin
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Edit: This is specifically at work/rotations. Obviously speeding puts your career at risk if you factor in loss of transportation (impoundment), MVA, etc. Last edited by Bacchus; 05-01-2012 at 01:21 PM. |
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#66 |
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Senior Member
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Some people like to smoke a doobie and some people don't. Either way, the ethics of this discussion is pointless.
As Katt Williams says: "I dun the research, it's just a plant, it just grow like dat. And if you happen to light it on fiya...there might be some effects!" |
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#67 |
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Has an MD in Horribleness
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Nvm
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#68 | |
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1K Member
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I have a friend who enjoys marijuana, he got goods grades, got into a very good school and I think he will be a damn fine doctor based on knowing him. Although there are potheads who do absolutely nothing with their lives but smoke weed, I know some straight edge and smart people who occasionally partake. I don't see how it's any of my business if it is not effecting their abilities and they aren't doing it at work. (I don't smoke pot btw, don't like it.) |
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#69 | |
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1K Member
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And how do you know this? What basis can you back this up. There's no support or data to prove that professionals that get high on their own time over the long run are not detrimentally affected cognitively, judgement-wise, or that patients are affected or not affected. If you change high to sleep deprived |
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#70 | |
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Banned
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Funny I was actually one of the ginny pig residents used in a study time testing us with these technical obstacle courses with needle drivers, threading sutures through eyeholes, etc post-call vs fresh. Yeah I think slower times were recorded. We knew all our patients like the back of our hand. These cross-cover housestaff schemes are more like finger plugging holes in a breaking dam to keep patients barely alive until the sun rises and the real team comes in but thats just been my experience for what its worth. |
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#71 |
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Senior Member
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FYI...its not illegal...at least not in Cali
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#72 |
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Duke of minimal vowels
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Let's keep it civil folks.
To contribute something, there was a pretty extensive debate on this topic (and also alcohol use) in the medical student and resident forums a while back. forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=834299 http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=810267 forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=191192
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I love medical school. Vaccines are one of the great triumphs of medical science. They cost little, have few side effects, are incredibly safe, and they don't cause autism. If they just made free beer, they would be perfect. Green our vaccines? They only green you will see by getting rid of vaccines or decreasing their use is the grass growing on the graves of children needlessly killed by preventable diseases. -Mark Crislip, MD |
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#73 | |
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Dr. Cox Protege
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If your main argument against substance abuse is that it could impact your career because licensing and credentialing bodies effectively require you to follow the law, then you're correct. No one would deny that. However if you're trying to argue that something about private pot use specifically is inherently wrong or unethical, then you're failing miserably.
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-NickNaylor http://medicalschoolisseriousbusiness.com/ ...for even the mind depends so greatly on the temperament and on the disposition of the organs of the body that, if it is possible to find some means to render men generally more wise and more adroit than they have been up until now, I believe that one should look for it in medicine. Rene Descartes, Discourse on Method |
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#74 | |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 9
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#75 |
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MS-0
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Sirenomelia, I don't understand what's so wrong with ignoring what people do in their private time. The only concern you should have is the merit of any individual's effort at school/work. Live and let live as long as you aren't harmed from those actions.
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It looks like I'm missing class this week. My name is August West, and I love my Pearly Baker best more than my wine. More than my wine, more than my maker, though he's no friend of mine. - Jerry Garcia Class of 2017! |
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#76 | |
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Banned
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#77 | |
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1K Member
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#78 |
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4K Member
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Oh, are we still doing this thread? Hi.
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#79 |
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Senior Member
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Using illegal drugs makes you a criminal. Nothing I enjoy more than ensuring that users never become doctors.
At my medical school we let every applicant know that drug use will not be tolerated and that each student will be drug tested at random over the four years of attendence. Expulsion from school is the result from a positive test. At orientation we show photos of students that were expuled from previous years. Every year 1 or 2 gets caught... once we had a MS4 that used MJ on an away rotation-- gone. |
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#80 | |
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1K Member
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#81 | |
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Senior Member
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Honestly, the fact that you enjoy publicly humiliating someone whose life is ruined is pretty upsetting to me. And, I'd rather pay money to be treated by a doctor who smokes pot at his free time than be treated by someone like you for free. |
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#82 | |
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Senior Member
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#83 | |
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Cпутник-1
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#84 | |
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MD c/o 2016
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 1,088
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Moral bankruptcy win.
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I ☤ New Orleans |
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#85 | |
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tasty
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For what it's worth, I don't believe sirenomelia ever addressed this interesting question.
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#86 |
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Banned
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why do you assume most people willing to break the law to continue their habit are never going to have it affect their performance at work or be impaired at work at some point? Its not some innocuous hobby like backgammon. Further, you're going to get drug tested and whether or not you did pot only at home or around the clock you're going to test positive for cannibis. How is anyone else supposed to know you never used it at work? Then there is a personal moral standard that doctors should be above such behavior IMO. Would you tell your patients or want them seeing you smoking dope and acting like a fool out and about? You going to tell your colleagues and expect them to respect you and refer patients? I wouldnt. Just if i knew someone had a drinking problem, or was abusing prescription narcs or whatever outside of work. I would just assume they lacked judgement and/or were impaired and dangerous.
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#87 | |
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Cпутник-1
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Which bible belt state are you from, sirenomelia? |
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#88 |
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Senior Member
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Yeah, I agree.. it's disgusting that someone actually enjoys catching students and effectively ruining their lives.
Anyway, I know plenty of pre-meds who smoke, as well as current medical students. Most of them are very intelligent, capable, hard working people. Instead of having a drink or two at night to relax, they smoke a little bit and chill out. I never heard of anyone in my circles that has had a "weed problem"/ abused marijuana. Most of them just everyday people who like to chill, eat food, and listen to music when they relax at night and perhaps on weekends. Demonizing them and claiming they aren't capable of succeeding in the medical field seems really silly. |
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#89 |
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Banned
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MARIJUANA is ILLEGAL. When you get stressed out, just do what I do...snort zoloft, okay?
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#90 |
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Senior Member
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http://www.addictionpro.com/article/...bout-marijuana
And you guys want to be doctors... good luck with that. And don't forget to give customers hot sauce with their tacos. |
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#91 | |
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Cпутник-1
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#92 | |
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Senior Member
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The OP asked a question, I gave an answer. Don't like it? Good. https://wfa.kronostm.com/index.jsp?a...t&locale=en_US |
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#93 | |
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Banned
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And to all of you....what you do outside of work does matter. In fact much of the time an action against a licensee does not involve their practice. Ive seen a parade of clowns who used coke, wrote scripts to friends, had sex with patients, and even a guy who was arrested for slapping ho's at a strip club- when they got into professional jeopardy all say the same thing as the people here- its my personal life so why does it matter? |
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#94 | |
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1K Member
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The fact an activity is risky like alcohol or tobacco shouldn't mean that it should be banned prohibition has been a failure and has caused petty criminals to gain empires. Prohibition of alcohol caused needless deaths and the failed war on drugs has done the same. I do not nor will I ever try marijuana, however people have a right to choose what they put in their bodies. From a public policy perspective as well as one of individual liberty it is clear that drug war has failed. |
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#95 |
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SGU MS-2
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Don't, because this will happen to you ;p
http://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/loca...149758275.html Daniel Chong, the UC San Diego student who was left in a Drug Enforcement Agency holding cell for nearly five days, said the time spent in his cell was a life-altering experience. Before holding a press conference Tuesday afternoon, the 23-year-old spoke with NBCSanDiego and said he was increasingly worried throughout the days he spent in a 5 ft. by 10 ft. cell, where he could not spread his arms out wide. Source: DEA Ignored All My Cries: Student | NBC San Diego
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You must learn from the mistakes of others. You can't possibly live long enough to make them all yourself. |
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#96 |
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tasty
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I think you're all missing the most important point in this discussion: smoking marijuana is bad for your lungs. It's important to make informed health decisions as future medical professionals, you know. Critical thinking is very important: without it people tend to quickly become hypocritical.
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#97 | ||
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tasty
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Also: he must have a really large wingspan if 10ft isn't large enough to spread his arms out wide. |
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#98 |
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Senior Member
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Is there a test to determine if a recreational smoker is high at that exact moment? I know theres obviously breathalyzers for alcohol but im yet to hear of one that can determine that someone is high at that moment as compared to say 8 hours previously. If there is one shame to me for not finding it, but this is my main problem with the idea of smoking as a doctor. We have cheap, accurate and immediate tests that can tell a persons BAC immediately so there can be concrete evidence if someone comes into work drunk. For smoking, not so much. How do we know someone wasn't high the night before, or was high earlier but not anymore etc. all i know of is drug tests but if someone smokes recreationally it would be much harder to determine if they are smoking and having the effects fully wear off before coming into work. someone who simply looks like they've been smoking isn't grounds for firing but a positive test indicating they are impared in any way while interacting with patients is. You want to smoke on your own time? Whatever, but don't try and practice medicine while you're still feeling the effects.
That is one of the main reasons why I am against doctors smoking recreationally. But seriously though, is there a smoking equivalent of a breathalyzer? That might change my views on it.
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“Let the first act of every morning be to make the following resolve for the day: - I shall not fear anyone on Earth. - I shall fear only God. - I shall not bear ill will toward anyone. - I shall not submit to injustice from anyone. - I shall conquer untruth by truth. And in resisting untruth, I shall put up with all suffering.” ― Mahatma Gandhi |
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#99 |
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New Member
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 1
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Sirenomelia:
Your entire argument is predicated on the legality of marijuana use. If (and by public opinion, it's is more when marijuana becomes legal, the stigma about usage is alleviated and the loss of license and/or professional career will become greatly diminished. If you still think physicians should be abstinent from marijuana use, you should also be advocating random breathalyzers during rounds or routine BAC checks. For the most part, people get into medical school and become physicians because academically and socially, they are exemplary individuals. In order to become a physician you have to demonstrate some responsibility and commitment and most medical student exhibit that. Obviously there will always be a few who slip through the cracks, but you seem to be obsessed with persecuting these few individuals and tarnishing anyone in medicine that recreationally uses a fairly safe and short-lasting drug. Your evidence is purely anecdotal and your argument is based on legality and not morality. If you hold that mindset, I wouldn't have a hard time believing that you would have participated in Nazi Germany under the guise that you were simply following the law and order of the time and only doing what "was required" .... Wait, did I just compare you to a Nazi..... Obviously that is ludicrous, spiteful, ridiculous, and stupid but the sentiments that you cast over marijuana users are of that extreme and have no basis in evidence or any sense for that matter. It is insulting. You say that private use is a factor in workplace activity, but if marijuana becomes legal, smoking marijuana will not shed any negative light on the institution you represent (unless it is full of close-minded individuals like yourself), it provides a relaxing experience for the stresses of a professional in the medical world, and, if done responsibly, is as harmless as some of the top physicians in this country who go to a bar on the weekends or drink beer while watching the game on Sundays. Again, morality does not equal legality and for someone who has gone through so much education,you can do your homework and agree that marijuana is the least harmful of any drug (including alcohol) in terms of addictiveness (none), impairment (far less than alcohol), and inappropriate behavior (I have never heard of anyone that smokes that has become violent, agitated, or in any way, reckless). |
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#100 | |
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Senior Member
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I don't understand how do you just assume moral high ground based on what the law is saying? Maybe smoking weed every day is bad, but what is always worse is to look down on people especially when their lives are in trouble. From the comment above you come across as someone who is actually happy with others loosing their medical licences for reasons not related to medicine. The fact that you're so quick to pass on judgments on people who you know practically nothing about and trigger-happy to get them out of medicine as soon as possible just because because their behavior defied your view of morality is bothersome. Where is your empathy for your fellow physicians? Not even once have you mentioned rehab or getting them some sort of counseling or other outside help. No, lets just get rid of them. They can all go work in Taco Bell because only people who have never done anything illegal or even morally questionable in their lives deserve to be doctors. And my question still stands. Have you ever knowingly broken the law? |
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You really mean all of this, don't you? I thought you were a masterful troll for the last three months, but I'm starting to realize exactly how insane you are.








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