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barbara ford's avatar

I wondered, as i read your experience, if today you were a med student you would be “cancelled” by those attendings and found to be unsuitable for a career in medicine. Appreciate you challenged and asked questions, and thankful you hold humility as important to your profession.

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Linda McConnell's avatar

I preface this comment with a time my family physician did admit he didn't know, excused himself, and looked it up. I don't think I've ever felt so sure and connected to a doctor since. Don't you think what a doctor thinks about him/herself and portrays to patients is due to the patients? It looks and sounds like a hamster wheel. "If I don't know, I won't be trusted". "If my doc doesn't know, I can't trust him". "If I admit frailty I'm vulnerable". "I wonder what grades my doc got in med school". "If I admit I don't know or I make a mistake I'll be sued". "If my doc doesn't get this right, my uncle the lawyer, will sue his butt". Is it because of the forever fear of pending lawsuits that doctors can't be open and honest? Are we as patients putting doctors into a position of no win - no win because he/she can never ever make a mistake with me, my mom, my son, etc? It's not like breaking a vase that can be replaced, there are times if a doctor makes a mistake it could be lethal. But that doesn't make him/her any less human than the rest of us. I get mistakes. I get not knowing. The case of RaDonda Vaught scared the pants off many in the medical field because we know it could be us at any given day, any time. We're all human but it doesn't mean we all behave with dignity.

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