Anonymous wrote:I’m curious what kind of doctors the prior two pps know? The ones I know work a ton.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree medical school should require some sort of mandatory number of hours worked like the military. Maybe the minimum per year is some part time number but there should be some cumulative number that adds up to five years practice.
Disturbing to see at least 2 people in this thread suggesting private citizens have mandatory workload obligations. Do you hear yourselves?
If we do not have enough people wanting to be doctors, then we need to incentivize becoming a doctor.
If we have enough people who want to be doctors but they are being weeded out (as a PP suggested) or not finding residencies (as the OP article suggests) then we can fix that.
If you think medical services should be provided or subsidized by the government, plenty of people agree with you.
But the answer is never for the government to require an individual to work more than they want to or need to just because there are more patients to see.
Anonymous wrote:I agree medical school should require some sort of mandatory number of hours worked like the military. Maybe the minimum per year is some part time number but there should be some cumulative number that adds up to five years practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m curious what kind of doctors the prior two pps know? The ones I know work a ton.
NP here, but the docs in my family medicine practice are like this. 2 days in 1 office, 1 day in a second. That seems to be it.
It's not like they are also surgeons, so they can't be doing surgery on a 4th day.
I can't see the practice "giving" everyone a full day for charts. But maybe? That still only comes to 4 days.
I called for a physical last week and they gave me a date more than 6 months later.
How do you know the schedule of every doctor in your practice? It seem like maybe you are looking for things to gripe about.
It's your insurance company that is ruining healthcare FWIW.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m curious what kind of doctors the prior two pps know? The ones I know work a ton.
NP here, but the docs in my family medicine practice are like this. 2 days in 1 office, 1 day in a second. That seems to be it.
It's not like they are also surgeons, so they can't be doing surgery on a 4th day.
I can't see the practice "giving" everyone a full day for charts. But maybe? That still only comes to 4 days.
I called for a physical last week and they gave me a date more than 6 months later.
Anonymous wrote:I’m curious what kind of doctors the prior two pps know? The ones I know work a ton.
Anonymous wrote:I have to say I’m mystified by all this.
I have a very smart incredibly hard working teen who wants to be a doctor. She did well in HS and got into an excellent college. But now they seem like they want to push half the kids out of pre med with really hard “weed out” classes and a lousy grading curve. And on top of all that coursework she’s supposed to do research (even though no labs have spots thanks to the administration), shadowing (which you basically have to know someone to achieve), clinical hours (really don’t even know how you do this) and volunteering, plus of course studying for the mcat. And that’s all before med school itself and the grind of residency! It really seems like they don’t want people to be doctors! So we end up importing doctors from countries that make it much easier to be doctors. This all seems to make zero sense to me. We are taking our top American students and doing everything we can to duscourage them from becoming doctors.
Anonymous wrote:I agree medical school should require some sort of mandatory number of hours worked like the military. Maybe the minimum per year is some part time number but there should be some cumulative number that adds up to five years practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, we all are going to die anyway. Why even bother with healthcare?
We don’t have healthcare, we have sickcare. Our current system is doing tremendous harm.
Anonymous wrote:Well, we all are going to die anyway. Why even bother with healthcare?