Discussion about this post

User's avatar
DanB1973's avatar

This is how medical titles should be reclassified. We don’t need doctors and professors and specialists in this or that. We only need Co.D. and Te.D. - community doctors and technical doctors. Their knowledge base should be identical, obviously. Technical doctors may be masters in performing complex life-saving operations, but have not mastered the art of being in touch with the patient. This does not make them worse or what. They are simply best in doing things where the human aspect is not involved. In many cases, they will be perfect candidates to provide the care needed. Community doctors can merge technical aspects with the magic human touch, often expressed in a few words, often in silence - but they are there and the patient knows that they count on them.

Expand full comment
JDM's avatar
Sep 13Edited

As I read this wonderful piece, I thought that I would love to distribute it (on paper) to our subspecialty pediatrics fellows at weekly teaching conference. They are good and kind people. But their focus is entirely technical. While their tiny babies benefit from that focus, the parents of those babies would benefit more from some time spent on more than just a factual“medical update”.

A nurse will sometimes tell me that I am “so good with families”. It’s not hard to see how a family is feeling when their child, born too soon, is surviving by dint of an array of technology. A sentence or two is enough to make an alliance with a parent, for them to feel seen. These kinds of interactions might become part of our trainees’ conversations with families if they had the opportunity to observe their supervisors doing similar things.

Expand full comment
28 more comments...

No posts