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But when you are in med school you are covered by a certain degree of malpractice that premeds are not covered by. So there's that slightly legal difference. Furthermore, what you did was in a teaching hospital where patients are informed of the fact that there are several students and residens rotating through it whereas the case with NCF was one where the patient was uninformed and the hospital was not one where patients regularly saw students rotating through it. That could have caused some legal liabilities.
Don't get me wrong, I agree that the legal circumstances are completely different.
It's just that some neurosurgeons don't seem to worry about that kind of thing.