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#151 | ||
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3K Member
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It was your pain that they just didn't care about because it likely had no organic cause. You people (yeah that's right, you people) are people most normal doctors avoid at all costs. They have too much true illness to deal with, without your whinny crap getting in the way. That is one of the reasons I am going into a field that has true illness- cardiology. You can't fake an MI. Your mind can't create critical aortic stenosis. You can't whine about symptomatic a-fib or heart failure without there being some real illness. I'm gonna guess that is not just the doctors that ignore you and your "symptoms." Stop me if I'm getting close. |
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#152 |
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Account on Hold
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^^ can I get a +/-1 from someone actually post medschool on the "my pain" comment? I gathered that shadowing ER for a year as well as a couple other sources, so it is mostly opinion... It always came out when a patient was getting denied meds. "it hurt" was the complaint, until the patient was mad and suddenly we have ownership of the pain.
along the lines of your post, though, we had a "frequent flyer" at the ER who had delusions of parasitosis. Insisted the doc use the UV vein-finder because we would be able to see the bugs inside her that were apparently inside the baggie full of tissue paper and fuzz bunnies she brought us. The doc did it for fear of being sued by a crazy person lol. even if a case wont win it is still a hassle to deal with i guess |
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#153 | ||
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MS 1
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Wayne State University SOM; year I = done |
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#154 |
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1K Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 1,318
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#155 | |
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Subaquatic Creel Engineer
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 337
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![]() ...or sistah?
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Accepted - MD Class of 2016 ![]() ---------------------------------------------------------------- He will again have compassion on us, And will subdue our iniquities. You will cast all our sins Into the depths of the sea. - Micah 7:19 |
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#156 | |
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Senior Member
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#157 | |
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Banned
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So without compassion many doctors can still provide care But without compassion, in extremely difficult cases, compassion + competence are the determining factors for effective care Why can't you digest that? I am the patient, so i get to tell you what works and what doesn't |
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#158 | |
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This is why i used the word "unable" earlier. it isnt a willingness or stubbornness... I think you genuinely believe what you say and are incapable of seeing how the two are not connected. Yes, competence + compassion = effective treatment. BUT competence + douchebaggary = effective treatment. therefore competence = effective treatment. The only thing that outward compassion adds to the experience is an increase in patient compliance and a decrease in malpractice suits. That is it. But noncompliance does not mean the treatment is ineffective, it means that the treatment wasnt followed. This is a very important distinction you will need to understand if you want to go on to medical school (although it will suffice just fine for MPH )and we have ALL been patients. You are not unique nor is your perspective somehow at an advantage. in fact, it puts you at a disadvantage because you cannot stay objective. you blur the lines and distinciton and walk away with a conclusion that compassion = competence. I will not ask why you cant "disgest" this,as I think it is simply beyond you - but that may be my own bias as I view subjectivity as a very large handicap |
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#159 | |
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Banned
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#160 | |
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#161 | |
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Señor Member
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#162 | |
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Banned
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#163 | |
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In your circular progression it doesnt matter how much anyone cares. The only thing that matters is how much YOU perceive them to care in that you will only divulge necessary information if the doctor has passed your subjective test. This is still not supporting your argument in any way. |
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#164 |
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Señor Member
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Lives.
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#165 | |
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Banned
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#166 |
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#167 |
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SGU MS-2
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Stop the fighting!
Won't somebody think of the children?
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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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#168 | |
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3K Member
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To respond to this you are just plain wrong. In difficult cases, competence is what determines effective care. Compassion is what gives the patient that warm and fuzzy feeling inside. The fact that you haven't grasped that these are different concepts is the entire reason for this thread. |
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#169 | |
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Outcome X requires components A and B. Component Y can increase the effectiveness of component B. Therefore Component Y is necessary for outcome X. This is false. Under no circumstances will a lack of "component Y" ever result in failure of outcome X as defined here. Your error is in assuming that compassion affects the physician. It does not. It affects the patient in terms of mood and willingness to follow directions. Thats great and there are uses for it. However if the "situation" is more difficult, you cant just "care" at it harder and expect a different outcome. |
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#170 | |
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Señor Member
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#171 | |
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Banned
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And if my condition were fake, howcome it was finally cured ? thanks to a real physician not the common physician ? dude there is doctor and doctor, that MD/DO is not the end, meditate on that and please reply ASAP
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#172 |
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debate is therapeutic when dealing with endless pages of notes :-P
however "their level" in this sense would mean arbitrarily generating a point of view and adhering to it at all costs. Simple engagement is not "sinking" by any means |
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#173 | |
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#174 |
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Al Herpin
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: minnesota
Posts: 36
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i hate when people have experienced one thing or the other and make an overwhelming generalization. if your doc is a real ******* just switch to another one. you arent assigned a doc and forced to stick with them.
ALSO 1) docs are underpaided for their skill set and hours they work 2) docs dont get the same respect as they use to many patients will argue that WebMD said they had this or that 3) docs dont have the same freedom to practice med as they use to |
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#175 | |
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Banned
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#176 | |
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Neuroplastic dermasurgeon
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#177 |
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Al Herpin
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: minnesota
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they censored my post
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#178 | |
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Señor Member
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#179 | |
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Senior Member
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By now with countless replies, simple analogies, and brute logic, you should succumb to the truth, plain truth that you are incorrect. I sense that through your erroneous logic and beliefs you feel that you are somehow special, unique, and thus should be accepted over the-less-compassionate individuals (the rest of us according to you). Let me give you another example. Let's assume hypothetically that one-hundred years from now technology begins to effectively take over various tasks that were previously done by homo sapiens, i.e Doctors. Lets assume that these robot doctors have a 99.99% success rate, are able to run through billions of treatment plans per second depending on the problem, and are also 80% faster than human Doctors. Over a period of ten years these robot doctors are tested, experimented, and found to be superior in every aspect to its human counterpart. As more of these robots are being produced, the human doctors begin to lose their jobs and are outsourced. Some human doctors such as yourself would probably cling to "But I am, like, a million time more compassionate than that lifeless machine!" But no one heeds your pleas. If this ever happens you should understand that patients would always choose the robot-doctor over the human one, who, as compassionate as one might be, is sub-par. I know this is extremely cheesy but I am trying to strike a point here and get it through your skull, that just because you had your own subjective experience with some rare disease, it does not account for the majority of us. Hopefully this clears things up a bit.
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My God, My God, why have you forsaken me? |
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#180 | |
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Im done. It was fun and hopefully some idealistic pre-med lurkers learned something. Have fun getting your MPH and sorry about the 2013 medschool application cycle
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#181 | |
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Account on Hold
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I agree.if his case actually was dependent on compassion then the key piece missing from the puzzle is what the illness was. |
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#182 | |
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3K Member
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If you let us know what your "condition" was that they treated I could better answer your first question. The fact that you are avoiding it makes me believe we may be on the right track. Also is this supposed to be a question: "Thanks to the real physician not the common physician?" I can't tell. Finally, I would medidate on, "dude there is doctor and doctor, that MD/DO is not the end" if it were a coherent thought. Please retool it and come back. |
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#183 | |||||
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adorablest member ever
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How dare you reduce them to "other things". I am apalled, mystified, and also disturbed by your reduction. We need to rise together and praise engineers who are our leaders and our fathers in this community we call the world. Quote:
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absolutely, but i don't think she'll ever get to clinical medicine. She'll end up MPH or a PA or MD and work only part time. She will never have a full time practice that she runs. Impossible. She would be eaten immediately.
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Have heart.![]() XOXO to all on SDN![]() *compassion can make a person's day brighter!* |
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#184 | |
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Account on Hold
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#185 |
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adorablest member ever
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Compassion is important because it helps to exaggerate the placebo affect. The placebo effect is great in treating patients, especially when it comes to psychologically related problems such as pain for example.
I hate to agree with freedomist on that but she is right about that. Compassion is important, but her reasoning is FALSE. Compassion for someone doesn't make a difficult illness easier to solve, in fact it can hinder progress because compassion is emotion and emotion can fog the practicality of the diagnostic procedure. This is why you shouldn't treat yourself, your close loved ones. When too much compassion is involved, you cannot make the same practical decisions that you would for a non-loved one. This is why I had asked you if you slept with your doctor, freedomist. I wasn't kidding, I wasn't joshing you. It was a serious question. You chose to ignore it. You chose to ignore my request for a full apology. For those who disagree with placebo affect, just look at the recent findings that antidepressants work no better than placebo for majority of average psychiatric problems! That's crazy. Don't ever underestimate the power of consoling someone, and being compassionate. It is important. If the patient feels better, they can get better! We cannot reduce that to "oh it doesn't matter" It does matter. BUT it is absolutely false to think that it helps to "dig deeper" and "more difficult cases" NO. NO. NO. |
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#186 | |
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Senior Member
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this made me :'( please apologize! the emotion...
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#187 | |
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5K+ Member
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P.S., why are people still feeding Freedomist? Guy can't even spit out linear progression of thought or structured english sentences that even slightly resemble cohesive logic, I think he's choking on his self-righteousness.
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I learned a long time ago that minor surgery is when they do the operation on someone else, not you. ~Bill Walton |
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#188 |
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#189 | |
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Has an MD in Horribleness
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I normally like your posts, but I have to disagree with this one. The attitude that parasthesias, chronic pain disorders, and iritable bowel syndromes are 'all in a the person's head' goes against the current body of medical evidience (I've never understood how people can call Irritable bowel 'all in your head' when it clearly affects the volume of your stool) and also is the excuse that physicians use to avoid treating these extremely treatable problems. The funny thing is that medical treatment of chronic pain disorders is often much more rewarding that the treatment of the majority of 'organic' medical conditions in terms of giving a patient years of funcitonal, productive life. Give your IBS a TCA, your chronic pain an SSRI or a fentanyl patch, or throw some neurontin at those pins and needles and you will very often get an essentially housebound patient back to work for years. I just saw a patient with persistent parasthesias who was functional on a stable dose of neurontin for 15 years with no complaints. How many MIs get years of functional life from our treatment? |
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#190 | |
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3K Member
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With regard to how many MIs get years of funcational life from our treatments: the vast majority of them which is why Cath and CABG are such fabulous modalities. A patient comes in with a STEMI on death's door, gets stented and walks out a few days later. Maybe in 1970 what you are saying would be true but now-adays people do pretty damn well unless they wait too long to get revascularized or they have incomplete revascularization. |
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#191 | |
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Neuroplastic dermasurgeon
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![]() PS- not trying to be a call out, I'm genuinely curious... As someone interested in EM, I'll be running into a ton of drug seekers, and I'll take all the advice I can get. |
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#192 |
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Gamer Doctor :D
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HOW DOES IT MAKE A DIFFERENCE?
Give some examples... Cause the one resident who suspected a somatization disorder sounds pretty legit. What did YOU have that compassion was needed? Rare disorders don't need compassion to be found, if you think so, name some! |
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#193 |
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Cпутник-1
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My pre-med ideals!!!!
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#194 |
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Gamer Doctor :D
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Oh right, this topic is in the pre-allo board
![]() Err....forget what I said! Guys, you need to love each and every patient like your own flesh and blood You need to spend AT LEAST 1 hour talking to your patients, asking about their dreams, motvations, life goals, favorite hookup story, what makes them smile and cry. Forget about the paging nurses and dictations and progress notes, THIS COMES FIRST.
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#195 |
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Has an MD in Horribleness
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Compassion is a motivator to put more time and effort into a patient. To chase down abnormal symptoms, to research your own patient rather than lazily condemning them to half a dozen consultants, to try to sort through the tangled webs of their social work and often incomprehensible medication regimines. Its not the only possible motivation, of couse, but its one possible reason to make sure your job is done well rather than jut done. Lets be honest: there are a lot of very unmotivaed physicians out there (especially once they're done with residency) and having something that pushes you to go the extra mile will make you better than a lot of your colleagues.
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#196 | |
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Account on Hold
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#197 | |
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5K+ Member
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I am going to have to differ with you on this. In my mind compassion and how well you do your job are not always so intertwined. I think showing outward compassion and empathy with your patients is a great thing and makes the patients feel better about your relationship. However, you don't need to ask your patient how his mood and emotions have changed since the MVA to dx a broken femur.... My point is motivated =/= compassionate, the two aren't 100% inclusive. Maybe the fear of being sued motivates a person or fear of destroying your reputation to make sure a diagnoses is correct instead of this gushing altruistic ideal premeds tend to have towards patients. If we always relied on compassion to motivate ourselves to treat our patients we would do ****ty jobs on the patients no one likes, which I won't expand on but I am sure you can think of some superstars you've seen. In those cases, you can't always run on compassion and perhaps run on the ideal of just being a professional. Last edited by tiedyeddog; 05-03-2012 at 08:23 PM. |
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#198 | |
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Has an MD in Horribleness
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Last edited by Perrotfish; 05-03-2012 at 08:26 PM. |
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#199 |
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Gamer Doctor :D
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Oh I hope I didn't mean to say that compassion is useless at all. Since yes, compassion is a positive thing to have as a physician!
the thing which made me at the OP how she throws around the word compassion. I'm guessing someone was watching too much Patch Adams and was mad when the doctors in real life weren't like that...
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#200 |
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Gamer Doctor :D
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Accepted - MD Class of 2016
This is why i used the word "unable" earlier. it isnt a willingness or stubbornness... I think you genuinely believe what you say and are incapable of seeing how the two are not connected.
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In your circular progression it doesnt matter how much anyone cares. The only thing that matters is how much YOU perceive them to care in that you will only divulge necessary information if the doctor has passed your subjective test.
And if my condition were fake, howcome it was finally cured ? thanks to a real physician not the common physician
Im done. It was fun and hopefully some idealistic pre-med lurkers learned something. Have fun getting your MPH and sorry about the 2013 medschool application cycle
Have heart.
this made me :'( please apologize! the emotion...






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