![]() |
Quote:
There is a reason it's called the party of old fat white men... It all makes sense now! Thanks for the enlightenment! |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I believe you have proven the validity of my dad's observation. |
Quote:
And that's where peer review comes in. It's intended to weed out misleading arguments and manipulated statistics. You can write an article with misleading statistics, but you won't get it published in any reputable journal. |
Quote:
But that's beside the point here, since the graph isn't the article. It's merely an illustration that shows how, given both current health care expenses and current life expectancies for smokers and non-smokers, a group of smokers would end up costing less in the long run. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Hey, he has a graph that he found on the internets. He is obviously right. The only thing that could be more compelling is if he found a pie chart. |
Quote:
A truly ridiculous comment. Even by GFY standards that is fucking retarded. :error |
Quote:
1) The government could enforce this. They can attach whatever requirements they want to a professional license. Making someone donate their services as part of a requirement for licensing would be no different than requiring continuing education. Unconventional? Yes. Unenforceable? No way. 2) There are professionals that do things similar to this every day. Guess what kind of people they are? They are the types that people consider to be the slimiest of slimy: lawyers. What's it called? Pro bono. In fact, many of the larger firms require a set number of annual pro bono hours per associate or partner. 3) If you think doctors are not generous, think again. My surgery last year was done without insurance. I started paying off the surgeon and he made the bill disappear after my second payment. Why? He chose to reward my responsibility. That was a spontaneous act of generosity on his part. So don't think just because they spend all of that money on medical school and other expenses that they are suddenly not interested in helping out where they can. |
Regarding doctors, if it were more financially attractive to be a GP than a specialist, you'd see more GPs than specialists. GPs would be far more valuable in regards to lowcost and/or pro-bono than specialists. Bring your kids to "free knee clinic day"? eh.
I like the original post that started this thread. Unfortunately, it requires Americans in general to become responsible for their own actions. That blows it right out of the realm of the possible. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
There is a low-cost pediatric clinic in there that is ran by a nurse practitioner. She shares her space in one of the apartments with a Latino officer that runs a police substation out of one of the apartments. It is only open one day a week (Tuesdays) for a few hours. She does things based on the ability of the parent(s) to pay. The suggested donation is $35 but some patients give as little as a dollar or two. The medications that are dispensed are provided by other clinics. The money raised just about pays the cost of the part time nurse/admin person and the lady that runs it may make $10 a week on a good week. The apartment complex donated the space recently served her with an eviction notice. It made no sense because the police sub-station is staying there and they are not expanding. It made no sense. It also wasn't because it was a burden to the community. My house faces the street that patients (or anybody entering that complex) has to go down. I didn't even know about this place until I originally read a "good deed" article in the local paper. About 8 weeks after I first that there was a clinic, I heard that she got eviction papers. I started pleading with the business community to donate space to this clinic. There is a ton of under utilized commercial space in my city. I also got local activists involved in the hunt. The pitch was to donate space that cannot be rented to this clinic and enjoy the tax write off. Nobody stepped up. There is still a ton of empty office spaces. Until things like that change, there is not much hope. There are medical professionals out there that want to help. The problem is that they need help themselves in order to offer this help. This was a nurse practitioner that was doing this. The cost of becoming an NP or even a PA is a lot cheaper than becoming a doctor. You do not even need a GP to pull off these clinics. Sure, they're needed for more complex cases, but some of the NP's/PA's seem to know more about health than some doctors. I went off an a tangent and apologize for that. I am super tired and just got riled up while thinking about what happened in my own neighborhood. |
Quote:
I put up with it for a year and a half, then got out of the relationship (it wasn't the sole reason). |
Quote:
Goes for any board... |
Most of you are too young to remember this but before health care doctors lived in the same neighbor as their patients.We had the adults doctor on one corner and a block and half away was the kids doctor.
|
So how much beer would I still be allowed to drink exactly?
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
That probably doesn't mean anything to you, but it's one of the most prominent medical journals in the world, as well as the one with the single highest impact factor. Simply put: the source I cited is one of the most credible ones in the world. |
Quote:
One word: God. |
Quote:
What's more important is that it lacks prestige, often lacks challenge, and still takes a lot of time and requires lots of responsibility. GPs spend lots of time just diagnosing various forms of crotch rot, telling people to take some rest and listening to old people who are merely lonely. But they still have to be alert all the time because with every patient, there's a chance that something's really wrong, and they still get woken up at 4 in the morning for what may or may not be actual emergencies. The best way to make the job of GPs more attractive would probably be to have more nurse practitioners. They can do 95% of what GPs can do, allowing GPs to focus on the things they're actually needed for instead of the other stuff. |
I love the people that order king sized fries, 3 hamburgers a cheese burger and big mac THEN they say "Ohhhh I better take a diet coke, I'm on a diet you know" :thumbsup
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
My friend used to work in a movie theatre when we were seventeen. He always had stories like that. Can I please get an extra large coke, extra butter, two chocolate bars....... oh and a small diet coke |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -7. The time now is 12:36 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
©2000-, AI Media Network Inc123