EDIT: Just realized I fudged up the topic title. Oops.
There is an article on cnn explaining the new MCAT. This was one of the comments:
You take an egghead, force them to work more than 40 hrs. straight for little pay, prevent them from living any kind of life or develop extracurricular interests, let them think that they are god and then they feel resentful when they are not worshipped, and you wonder why they can't communicate with sick people? Or develop relationships with anyone, really. They never developed themselves! First the system needs to choose well developed people to enter med school, and then the profession has to lose the awful arrogance of martyrdom that they have to memorize everything. Train them to fish, not to eat fish; it is easy to look up facts nowadays so teach them to use the technology. Then let them live normal lives, leave at 5 PM, go home to families, engage in their communities, and return refreshed in the morning. Everyone has figured out how to live within that discipline except doctors, thinking they can't hand off patients to the next shift. The profession would become more attractive, more people would enter it, more doctors would be available to cover the 24 hours, and doctors would become real people who could interact with real people. And best of all, patients wouldn't have to go to 10 doctors to get a diagnosis! That alone would increase physician efficiency by a factor of 10. Doctors would be happier and patients would be properly taken care of. Maybe we are getting close to this dream because the current system has failed sooooo many people. The profession is past self-policing; the public is forcing the profession to change or go broke. When will the profession and their training schools wake up?
I think the commentator is a little harsh but he raises a good point. How are doctors supposed to connect with patients if they don't lead "normal" lives?
There is an article on cnn explaining the new MCAT. This was one of the comments:
You take an egghead, force them to work more than 40 hrs. straight for little pay, prevent them from living any kind of life or develop extracurricular interests, let them think that they are god and then they feel resentful when they are not worshipped, and you wonder why they can't communicate with sick people? Or develop relationships with anyone, really. They never developed themselves! First the system needs to choose well developed people to enter med school, and then the profession has to lose the awful arrogance of martyrdom that they have to memorize everything. Train them to fish, not to eat fish; it is easy to look up facts nowadays so teach them to use the technology. Then let them live normal lives, leave at 5 PM, go home to families, engage in their communities, and return refreshed in the morning. Everyone has figured out how to live within that discipline except doctors, thinking they can't hand off patients to the next shift. The profession would become more attractive, more people would enter it, more doctors would be available to cover the 24 hours, and doctors would become real people who could interact with real people. And best of all, patients wouldn't have to go to 10 doctors to get a diagnosis! That alone would increase physician efficiency by a factor of 10. Doctors would be happier and patients would be properly taken care of. Maybe we are getting close to this dream because the current system has failed sooooo many people. The profession is past self-policing; the public is forcing the profession to change or go broke. When will the profession and their training schools wake up?
I think the commentator is a little harsh but he raises a good point. How are doctors supposed to connect with patients if they don't lead "normal" lives?