Hello Mr. Eastern Medicine and Ai. It is nice to hear from people like you who share similar goals as I do; to learn both East and West medicine. Although I'm in my fourth year UG, with plans to enroll in both Oriental (TCM) and Allopathic medical school, I nevertheless look forward to reading your posts and comments here.
As for your question smedley about cultural expectations of a physician, I am not sure if I will answer your q' but i'll give it a try. Running along the lines of the other posts, regardless of what type of medicine he/she practices (East or West), I am confident that all practitioners share the same goal of alleviating and treating the illness of the patient. I know that in Chinese medicine (as well as in Allopathic medicine), much emphasis is placed upon the PREVENTION of the disease, before the onset of the symptoms arise (they say that TCM doctors-traditional Chinese medicine-who prevent the illnesses of their patients are viewed and considered far more superior of a doctor than those who treat the patients when the symptoms arise). This is probably one expectation held among the TCM community, where an emphasis on prevention of illness, through tai chi, qi gong, changes in diets (less consumption of greasy food) and sexual activity is prescribed to patients. I am confident that this can also be translated in the West, where doctors will tell patients to change eating habits, as well as daily activities that constitutes stress (in Chinese medicine, stress is seen as a major factor for cancer as well as other life-threatening illness)
I hope I don't go off on a tangent here, but another cultural expectation of physicians is that they should also learn the various types of medicine, other than just allopathic medicine-especially in the Asian American community. I had the opportunity to volunteer at the EastWest Center of Medicine at UCLA, a medical center where they blend both Chinese and Western medicine, as well as to sit in and to listen in with the 4th year UCLA medical students, as they took thier elective course in EastWest medicine. I was able to notice how the doctors there voiced an interest as to how their western-trained Chinese colleagues, should also take up a study into Chinese medicine, given the many multi-facted changes that are going on in America, as well as the benefits that patients can recieve from them. So I think that all in all, there seems to be both external and internal cultural expectations of physicians.
"Walk on left side of the road, safe; walk on right side of the road, safe; walk in the middle of the road, get squished like grape."