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Several things to unpack here, but two immediately leap to mind:
1) I'm not sure what the abbreviation "HD" stands for. Does he mean HDR brachy? Am I just being dense? Regardless, while it's good (perhaps necessary) to be exposed to the uncommon cases and procedure-based treatments, I think we're past the point where we can stop pretending like doing a couple T&O (+/- interstitial) cases over the entire course of residency makes it OK for you to go out into the world and do it independently. For the uncommon-to-rare/high risk treatments requiring a level of procedural skill (so, most brachy that isn't skin or cylinder), we should be moving towards ACGME-accredited fellowships with separate board certification. Pediatrics should go that way as well. However, I have read papers in the Red Journal from literally 40 years ago calling for the exact same thing, and clearly nothing happened...so I guess we can continue pretending. Because "doing" 8 instead of 6 cervix cases over 4 years was definitely the missing link.
2) As always...you don't get to throw your opinion out into the universe on a public platform and request discourse only from certain individuals. That's not how any of this works. Because, to flesh out Ken's last Tweet:
"Here I am as faculty at a well-known institution with opinions on the classic/traditional side of academic RadOnc, on a platform (Twitter) with a razor-thin edge for any sort of debate devolving into chaos, and I am only going to engage with people who are not anonymous, knowing full well that dissenting opinions from traditional RadOnc on Twitter (or elsewhere) carries high personal/career risk for the person(s) dissenting, as this is a very small field where everyone knows everyone and it's very easy to blacklist people from seeking employment in an entire geographic region".
I don't think many of us are willing to openly debate the Elder RadOnc Faction and risk White Knighting/Radical Candor/"plz don't cancel me miscreants" editorials/etc.
Elder RadOncs are going to do what they want on whatever timeline they want until they retire at age 82, and the rest of us are just left here to languish and hope medical students seek gainful employment elsewhere.