Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IMO one of the largest factors is that medical school (like law school) does not screen for the factors that make for a good practitioner and over relies on grades and test scores. This tends to lead to a glut of medical students with astronomical scores and low social skills / emotional IQ. I don’t care as much about the role of foreign trained physicians as the fact that the structure of premedical and medical education weeds out kids who would be truly terrific doctors, particularly in primary care / peds / geriatrics (where the need is highest and “soft skills” are hugely important. I just finished a non-medical masters program at a top medical school. I was horrified at the utter lack of social skills amongst the so called best and brightest and it wasn’t just the international students by a long shot. Truly, it was so bad I worried for my future medical care. I think something has to change!
This is your opinion. I would rather go to a doctor who is on top of their knowledge, up to date on latest research in their field, good diagnostician, and is thorough. So called “soft skills” rank below all of the above. I would also prefer to trust my life in the hands of an A student rather than a B student.
+1. Soft skills are okay as long as you are getting a flu shot or being treated for a simple sickness. When a patient is facing life or death situation as in a cancer patient, soft skills at the expense of top notch research knowledge is no good. The doctor in the later case needs to be thoroughly aware of latest research, cutting-edge cancer treatments, latest drugs, even latest clinical trials underway, etc. It doesn't cut to say "as long as the doctors are republicans" a la Ronald Reagan.
Anonymous wrote:Some posters here seem to think it is easy for a foreign doctor to come to US and do residency. No American teaching hospital is rolling out red carpet to recruit foreign educated doctors. Also, it is not easy to get a visa for foreign doctors to come to US. Given all things otherwise equal, why would any US teaching hospital offer residency to a foreign educated doctor over a US Medical School graduate? If you stop for a second and think logically with open mind you will realize that foreign educated doctors are exceptionally well qualified and overcame many obstacles to be where they are.
Regarding Duke premed students being curved out despite their stellar credentials prior to entering Duke, one doesn't have to be at Duke or other selective schools to go to med school. I know of students who had full ride at UMBC and had more than one med school admission offer each. Yes, undergrad GPA matters in admission to med schools. Duke and other highly selective schools can't give high GPAs for all students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IMO one of the largest factors is that medical school (like law school) does not screen for the factors that make for a good practitioner and over relies on grades and test scores. This tends to lead to a glut of medical students with astronomical scores and low social skills / emotional IQ. I don’t care as much about the role of foreign trained physicians as the fact that the structure of premedical and medical education weeds out kids who would be truly terrific doctors, particularly in primary care / peds / geriatrics (where the need is highest and “soft skills” are hugely important. I just finished a non-medical masters program at a top medical school. I was horrified at the utter lack of social skills amongst the so called best and brightest and it wasn’t just the international students by a long shot. Truly, it was so bad I worried for my future medical care. I think something has to change!
This is your opinion. I would rather go to a doctor who is on top of their knowledge, up to date on latest research in their field, good diagnostician, and is thorough. So called “soft skills” rank below all of the above. I would also prefer to trust my life in the hands of an A student rather than a B student.
It is. But I am taking about an A student versus a B+ (maybe at a harder college) student, who can actually make eye contact, have a conversation and communicate. I think thoroughness and diagnostic skills are much easier to teach, than to take a 26 year old with dC- social skills and humazine them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And to the person who said they have encountered doctors "from places you have never heard of".....speak for yourself.
Not all Americans are insular and ignorant.
+1. What place have you "never heard of?"![]()
Can you name the top colleges and medical schools in Iraq and India and Bangladesh?
How do they stack up to the Ivies, the ACC and BigTen?
IIT is as good as the top Us schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And to the person who said they have encountered doctors "from places you have never heard of".....speak for yourself.
Not all Americans are insular and ignorant.
+1. What place have you "never heard of?"![]()
Can you name the top colleges and medical schools in Iraq and India and Bangladesh?
How do they stack up to the Ivies, the ACC and BigTen?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IMO one of the largest factors is that medical school (like law school) does not screen for the factors that make for a good practitioner and over relies on grades and test scores. This tends to lead to a glut of medical students with astronomical scores and low social skills / emotional IQ. I don’t care as much about the role of foreign trained physicians as the fact that the structure of premedical and medical education weeds out kids who would be truly terrific doctors, particularly in primary care / peds / geriatrics (where the need is highest and “soft skills” are hugely important. I just finished a non-medical masters program at a top medical school. I was horrified at the utter lack of social skills amongst the so called best and brightest and it wasn’t just the international students by a long shot. Truly, it was so bad I worried for my future medical care. I think something has to change!
This is your opinion. I would rather go to a doctor who is on top of their knowledge, up to date on latest research in their field, good diagnostician, and is thorough. So called “soft skills” rank below all of the above. I would also prefer to trust my life in the hands of an A student rather than a B student.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IMO one of the largest factors is that medical school (like law school) does not screen for the factors that make for a good practitioner and over relies on grades and test scores. This tends to lead to a glut of medical students with astronomical scores and low social skills / emotional IQ. I don’t care as much about the role of foreign trained physicians as the fact that the structure of premedical and medical education weeds out kids who would be truly terrific doctors, particularly in primary care / peds / geriatrics (where the need is highest and “soft skills” are hugely important. I just finished a non-medical masters program at a top medical school. I was horrified at the utter lack of social skills amongst the so called best and brightest and it wasn’t just the international students by a long shot. Truly, it was so bad I worried for my future medical care. I think something has to change!
This is your opinion. I would rather go to a doctor who is on top of their knowledge, up to date on latest research in their field, good diagnostician, and is thorough. So called “soft skills” rank below all of the above. I would also prefer to trust my life in the hands of an A student rather than a B student.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same is true with nursing schools. They are hard to get into and then we hire from 2nd and 3rd world countries to fill our nursing shortages. Why?! Are Jamaican nurses that much more intelligent than the students who were weeded out? Why not increase the spots available to fill the need.
And same with doctors. We have a shortage of pediatricians and general practitioners
There is a nursing shortage in not only this country, but also in countries like the UK. As the population gets older, more healthcare providers are needed. It's why the home healthcare industry is growing.
American doctors don't want to practice family medicine. There's no money in it. That's why a lot of the rural doctors are from foreign countries.
The anecdotal evidence that people are putting forth as examples of how we don't have a shortage is just that.. anecdotal.
Some of you can't even explain why med schools pick foreign students over Americans without resorting to stereotypes.
https://www.aacnnursing.org/News-Information/Fact-Sheets/Nursing-Shortage
https://www.registerednursing.org/largest-nursing-shortages/
https://dakotafreepress.com/2018/09/19/legislature-approves-more-foreign-doctors-fill-unmet-rural-needs/
Anonymous wrote:IMO one of the largest factors is that medical school (like law school) does not screen for the factors that make for a good practitioner and over relies on grades and test scores. This tends to lead to a glut of medical students with astronomical scores and low social skills / emotional IQ. I don’t care as much about the role of foreign trained physicians as the fact that the structure of premedical and medical education weeds out kids who would be truly terrific doctors, particularly in primary care / peds / geriatrics (where the need is highest and “soft skills” are hugely important. I just finished a non-medical masters program at a top medical school. I was horrified at the utter lack of social skills amongst the so called best and brightest and it wasn’t just the international students by a long shot. Truly, it was so bad I worried for my future medical care. I think something has to change!