#121
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I'm sorry, but I don't want anyone with less than a 3.45 GPA in their undergraduate program even being given the opportunity to go to any kind of med school, OD school, PharmD school, Dentistry school...etc. Doctors already screw up enough as it is...
UNC Chapel Hill statistics Average entering medical school GPA: 3.65 Average entering PharD school GPA: 3.5 I don't think that is too outrageous. If it was really that competitive, shouldn't the GPAs be higher? Our medical school is #2 in the nation for primary care. #23 in the nation for research. Our pharmacy school is number 4 in the nation. I am not full of ****. I studied Medical Geography intensively last semester with one of the best professors in the country. She was the first ever to receive a doctorate in that field, and has also taught at UCLA. I learned the demographics of disease throughout the world, and the United States has far more degenerative health problems and psychiatric health problems than the other countries that you mentioned. As a scientist, I ask why? What is the significance of the statistics, and what are the reasons behind the statistics. Statistics are often biased and meaningless, just as maps are... The numbers aren't that important unless you also look at the reasons why, and do your own research. I'll give you an example of the shortage of doctors. There is a big shortage of ODs and ophthamologists right now. In GA, there is 1 OD per 10,000 patients. There just aren't a lot of people that go into those fields. It has nothing to do with the AMA limiting applicants to go into optometry or ophthamology. And I think that you have a psychiatrist mixed up with a psychologist. Psychiastrists prescribe medications, interpret electroencephalograms...etc.(let's see a nurse do those things). Psychologists are your counseling doctors. Psychiatrists are the ones that take care of people in mental institutions, and those that have diseases like schizophrenia, bipolar disorder...etc. They are very much needed in our society. Nurse anesthetists make over 200,000 dollars a year. PA's make 100,000+ dollars a year. They went to school longer, so they are compensated for their work. MDs go to school for 12+ years, so they should be compensated for the extra training. If a nurse goes to school for more than 4 years, they should be compensated for the extra training. Anyone that has eight years of official training is considered a doctor. In no way should a nurse ever be able to prescribe medications because they would have to go to school for that long to be able to do it, which=doctor. Also, colleges are not equipped to handle but a certain number of entering medical school students. Even huge medical colleges like Duke and Chapel Hill have to limit the number of applicants because there isn't enough equipment, enough space, or enough other doctors to take the time out of their work days to teach more students. These doctors need to be seeing patients with the shortages. Plus, who in their right mind wouldn't want to limit the applicants to the exceptional individuals? I don't want some dumb ass working on me or doing my surgeriesIt is an intensive program. Very intensive, and it should be. Otherwise, who cares about all the people's lives that they would **** up by prescribing wrong medications and making wrong diagnoses right? (being sarcastic) I asked my mom if doctors should make every bit of money that they make (I asked her because she works with them 5 days a week), and she said absolutely. They put in the time, they dedicated their lives, they went to college for that long, many of them work 80+ hours a week, and they should make the kind of money that they do. So, I don't think that it is right for anyone who doesn't know about the profession to be bad mouthing doctors just because they make more than the average person, and because they are against universal health care since it would make their jobs a lot more difficult for less pay. Last edited by kentuckyrosesinmay : 02-09-2008 at 03:29 PM. |
#122
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The AMA is a union for Doctors, not patients. Most teachers unions are for teachers, not students. |
#123
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no one is denied healthcare
this is all FDR's fault. employers had to offer benefits to attract employees because taxes were at 90% or something evil like that.
then everyone didn't care how much it cost because they had/ have insurance and the government loves that everything is going up. They get a percentage you know. but now friends of uncle Joe want to kill the golden goose
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ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ |
#124
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i'm getting a ph.d. in something important and my mom invented both medical school and socialism.
that's just in case anyone questions my credentials. anyone who posts below this has a serious mental illness. those who posted above should have their blood sugar levels checked. |
#125
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my mom could kick your moms butt!
my blood sugar is fine, so i must be mental.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#126
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If we have a serious mental illness, can we be covered by socialized medicine?
Will there be group rates??? |
#127
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To have figured so much out so early in life is astonishing. Maybe you should be a counselor. |
#128
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We can do without you and your father.God willing we will have a chance to do so.Has to stop being all about you,and start being about the patients.Too much of this thread is about doctors.It's mainly because of the out of control egos of you and your father.That's the problem in the U.S. with healthcare(all about the AMA.)We are not ignorant.We know who is responsible for this,and it's simply people trying to get rich off of sick people.......BLOODSUCKERS Last edited by SCUDSBROTHER : 02-11-2008 at 08:49 PM. |
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The FDA is in bed with the AMA, so the Patient will always be the loser! Doctors HAVE to become specialists because G.P.'s get financially minimized by the Insurance Giants! It's called Capitation...you can look it up
On the other hand .."socialized medicine" is nothing more than enforced mediocrity on the Doctors, and suffered by the Patients! How many of you have made fun/joked about county workers fixing our roads. Same thing with the Doctors under the Thumb of Healthcare Giants! Each patient counts the same...as little as 10 bucks a patient,depending on the various insurers that the Doctors office makes available to Patients! If the Doctors don't run the patients thru the office at a 'brisk pace'...then they're penalized by the Insurers! That is Fact! Other than that..I got nothing |
#130
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A psychiatrist is what I need at this point. I should know that placing win bets on any horse related to Noble Causeway is only going to burn me.
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http://www.facebook.com/cajungator26 |
#131
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Whenever you make this type of bet, immediately walk head first into a door frame! After a couple of those you should have successfully completed therapy Good Racing Luck! |
#132
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a friend of ours is an orthopedic surgeon. he and a few like minded docs opened their own ortho hospital--he's the guy who did the surgery on my husband last summer.
the hospitals in that city have been pretty much enraged since the place opened. seems our friend and his partners 'don't charge enough'. i hate to think what the bill would have been had tony gone to a traditional hospital, rather than to this place. and the care was exceptional! so, he and his partners could charge thru the nose as other places do, but they choose not to. shame there aren't more like him. but then, most hospitals have to overcharge their paying customers like crazy, to cover the costs of those who don't pay--and of course the huge increases in the bills explains why some can't pay! a dog chasing its tail.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#133
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#134
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__________________
http://www.facebook.com/cajungator26 |
#135
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History of health insurance in the US (and stuff on Canada, too):
http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_...rance.html#s49 Medical malpractice suits are a very small fraction of the reason health care is expensive- blaming them is just FOX propaganda to distract from real reasons and to blame something on lawyers, who are generally perceived to support Democratic candidates. Not saying there aren't frivolous lawsuits, but they are about as big a part of the health cost pie as the NEA is to your taxes (another favorite FOX target). If we really wanted to do something about medical malpractice, it would be better to lean on the AMA to police incompetent doctors, since a small number of doctors account for a sizable percentage of medical error. The insurance industry is a huge chunk of the cost- insurance companies make their money by not providing service. In what other industry is this considered normal? Mind you, disaster insurance, etc., makes sense- you pay a small amount of money every year as protection against something that is not likely to happen, but if it does, will cost you a lot of $$. So, a lot of people pay a small amount of $$, and a few of them wind up getting a lot of $$ in the event of disaster. Company makes money, and no one feels a real pinch. But health care is different- everyone is going to need it at some point in their lives. And you can yell about personal responsibility, and laziness, and blah blah blah, but at the end of it all you've still got a sick human being suffering and in pain. Just like you can yell about lazy poor people but in the end you've still got someone going hungry and/or sleeping in the street. Yes, some kind of universal coverage would raise taxes. It would also cut the cost of producing steel by 20 percent, because the businesses would not have to provide health care. So it could also bring jobs back to the US and make us competitive in manufacturing, etc. again. Is that preferable to higher taxes? Maybe, maybe not. One could ask, would a long wait to see a doctor encourage people to take better preventative care of themselves, because they know they'll have to fork out $$ from their own pocket to see a private doctor? Isn't that encouraging true individual responsibility and really motivating people to take care of themselves? Maybe, maybe not. I do find it interesting that Cuba's life expectancy is almost the same as the US's, with a much lower standard of living. They speculate it's because due to not having a surplus of food, and few people being able to afford cars, Cubans, while not starving, can't overeat, and since they have to walk and bicycle, stay fit. I'm not advocating it (duh; I like a stocked shelf as much as the next person); it's just interesting that, with all the $$ we spend, we're not living any longer or healthier than an embargoed, poverty-stricken nation is. I don't know the answer. I wonder if we'd be best served by some kind of gov't program that offers basic maintenance care, taking that out of the private insurance equation, and giving people the option of purchasing their own insurance for catastrophic health events. Americans tend to think in absolutes (one of the reasons, I'm convinced C2 failed), but there is usually more than a simple capitalism vs. socialism option. Social Security, by the way, is one of the most successful social programs ever instituted- virtually eliminated elderly poverty. And it's very, very efficient. Needs to have the retirement age raised, of course, and the discriminatory cap on earnings lifted, but for all the wailing that it's running into financial trouble, the amount we've wasted in Iraq would have kept it solvent for 2 centuries, and yet somehow the gov't found the $1 trillion for a war of choice. (On a grumpy note, I find it amusing that a person who owns her own horse and doesn't have to work a job while in college talks about having no money. Perspective, please. ) Danzig, if you really want to be taking no help from anyone, move to Rhode Island. As it is, Arkansas (you're from Arkansas, right?) gets $1.41 in federal aid for every $1.00 paid in taxes. (In NY, we get $0.79 back for every $1.00 we pay in, so in a way, one could say you're living off of me. ) Rhode Island is a pretty even $1.00 to $1.00 match. I'm teasing you, as I do believe richer states should help poorer ones, but it's always funny to hear the self-sufficiency argument coming from states who get more back from the government than they put in. All that said, I'm probably going to end up voting for the magical unity pony, as I'm angry at HRC for not voting on the FISA thing today. Though I do think she's been getting an unfair deal in the media, I base my vote on candidates' actions, and she should have been there for that vote. And Harry Reid is a scumbag.
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Gentlemen! We're burning daylight! Riders up! -Bill Murray |
#136
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Try www.kaiser.org or, better yet, type into google something like "Harvard School of Economics White Papers Cost of Health Care." You will find what you are looking for if you want to understand the issue very well. You will learn who the stakeholders in the current system are and what movement it will take from all of them to change the way health care is delivered and financed. You will learn that one of the biggest reasons HC costs so much more in the US is because this is where most innovation and the resulting technologies talkes place. If you don't care to really understand the issue, all you will have is a TV sound bite education on Health Care, i.e., evil insurance companies, predatory malpractice lawyers, etc.... |
#137
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#138
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You gotta change that name,man.
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