Originally posted by JoshD:
•The difference is Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine (OMM). D.O.s are trained in this aspect of medicine and M.D.s are not. It is fairly cut and dry, to my knowledge, what separates a D.O. from an M.D. •••
I addressed that in the post you just "disagreed" with:
They are trained the same for the most part as MD's -- they don't offer anything unique. They do *manipulation* and alternative medicine sure but for the most part they are doctors." ...Any MD can do manipulation once they learn how
If an MD wanted to do manipulation he could take a class. No one argues about the validity of a dental degree as compared to an MD because a dentist offers something unique that MD's don't want to do. No one argues that a nurse is valid or not because they do a lot of good work that MD's don't do and MD's do stuff that nurses are not particularly thrilled about. You guys are blind not to see the disadvantage - be objective - don't get so lost in your own defense mechanisms. Don't get me wrong, if I become an MD and meet you, the DO, as a colleague, I won't think twice about it. I'll know we both paid our dues dearly, and I'll know that our relationship is of equals and no doubt I could learn from you like I can learn from any physician. If I see that you, individually, do superior or shoddy work respectively, i'll judge you individually but not the whole DO field. However, the *public* by and large hasn't heard of DO's - the opportunities are there to do anything, but their wholistic beliefs themselves lend themselves more to gen. prac., and they do have to work harder to prove themselves. I can't believe I'm even arguing about this. Both of my parents are doctors and I preactically grew up in the hospital. I've had to explain numerous times to patients that a DO is a physician just like an MD. Personally, I think it is silly to have a separate degree for a physician who has some different skills/or beliefs about medicine. Geez, look what happened to the church denominations. Somebody asked for almighty proof! Go out on the street and ask ten people if they had life threatening illness would they rather be seen by an MD or a DO. I would guess they wouldn't say MD right away, but that they would say "what's a DO?". Proof? Look in the phone book. How many DO's vs. MD's do you see. That doesn't make MD's better, but as any MBA will tell you market share translates into greater consumer confidence in a product. I *know* DO's are just as competent and trained, but sheez, you guys must be blind or quirked up in the head ( I can't believe I'm even arguing about this) to not see how there is a bias to MD's. I don't believe men are superiot to women or whites superior to minority races (Dr. Black is probably the premier neurosurgeon in the country and he is not just named Dr. Black), but special considerations have been made for some minority groups because there are unfair disadvantages. The biases that exist against groups isn't right, but saying they are not there is not the solution. I am not saying it isn't right the way DO's are perceived, but can't believe you guys think it isn't there. I'm through - this is like arguing with religious fanatics