[lit-ideas] Re: Brazilian Medicine

  • From: Carol Kirschenbaum <carolkir@xxxxxxxx>
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sat, 01 Apr 2006 16:19:37 -0800

Americans are also streaming down to Mexico for medical (oncological) 
treatment. Remember Coretta Scott King? I'm not quite sure what all this 
says about US medicine, except that it's rather strictly controlled. Is that 
a good thing or not?

Q: Would you rather have a doctor who's graduated from Johns Hopkins and is 
board-certified, or a doctor whose degree is from a South American country, 
and who isn't board-certified in the US?

Or, is America's perception of its high medical standards a matter of 
effective PR by the AMA, or is it a bona fide feather in American surgical 
caps?

Carol,
whose relations are MDs in Brazil and Argentina










----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Eric" <eyost1132@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, April 01, 2006 1:27 PM
Subject: [lit-ideas] Re: Brazilian Medicine


> >>I don't know why that would make a big
> difference.  After a few years of
> practice any advantages should level out.
>
> No, it does. If you learn piano earlier, you play with more facility than 
> if you learn later in life.
>
> >>It seems the Americans should be streaming to
> Brazil.
>
> They DO ... for things like plastic surgery, internal ear reconstruction, 
> heart transplants, microsurgeries, and opthalmologic surgery.
>
> >>'Medical guidelines' sounds like another way of
> saying the system is more
> straightforward, less bribery.
>
> Medical guidelines are no-brainer, CYA procedures that prevent doctors 
> from being sued. They are updated every couple years. It's auto-pilot for 
> physicians.
>
> Now in medicine, doctors refer to "art." Medical "art" is the holistic 
> (rational-intuitive) use of a physician's cumulative clinical experience 
> and judgment. Brilliant doctors tend to use more "art." If you want an 
> example of pure (if unrealistic) "medical art," look at the TV show 
> "House."
>
> *Having medical guidelines means that physicians are free to practice 
> "medical art" while also being protected from malpractice.
>
> *Medical guidelines also mean that if you don't have a brilliant doctor, 
> but instead have a dolt-doctor or moron-doctor, you will be receiving a 
> minimal standard of care. Since 10 percent of all US doctors (and a 
> greater percentage of foreign doctors)  are moron- or dolt-doctors, 
> guidelines save lives.
>
>
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