h a l f b a k e r yI didn't say you were on to something, I said you were on something.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
It occurs to me that it is a major achievement even to be accepted into medicine. It is also a major achievement to pass even the first year of medicine.
My idea is to give a qualification to people who failed medicine for whatever reason.
A few ideas are:
POAFMOWIL(med): pretty old and forgot
most of what I leant
FFY(Med): failed first year (medicine).
FAAO(Med): failed almost all of (medicine).
FRACONQD: Fello of the Royal Australian College of Not Quite Doctors. A subset of Doctors San Frontiers, though known as Doctors Sans Ideas.
DFAFTU: Disected Frogs and Fucked that up.
[link]
|
|
Well, that would be an easy job. |
|
|
Based on the medical students I saw when I was a student, most would earn a DIOS (Drank Instead Of Studying). |
|
|
They could get a FTLTDBAAAAE known as
a Faulted BA - (failed to learn the
difference between an arse and an elbow)
Warning - list alert, but not a bad idea,
with other applications (+) |
|
|
In the UK there are National Vocational Qualifications - NVQs - with grades 1,2,3,4. |
|
|
For just getting into medical school, you get an NQD1 (Not Quite a Doctor). For each year sucessfully completed you get the next grade, NQD2, NQD3..... |
|
|
What happens then is anyone's guess. |
|
|
why doctors? its a bit elitest. |
|
|
what would you do with failed plumbers or car mechanics? |
|
|
For Pumbers - FTLTDBAAAAEJ - Failed
to learn difference between..... and an
elbow joint ? |
|
|
I'm elitist. I hate all elites. |
|
|
It's possible to do a BSc in medicine if you don't finish an MB, and there's also MB and ChB before MD, so i'd say this was baked. |
|
|
// A Patronising And Arrogrant Twat // |
|
|
I don't think you HAVE to be one to be a doctor .... <checks round > .... oh, sorry. You're right. |
|
|
// failed plumbers or car mechanics // |
|
|
They become Local Councillors. |
|
|
Only person I know who dropped out of studying medicine became a ... a ... a LAWYER. |
|
|
Veterinarians have to study quite a quite a bit; in the US it is statistically harder to get into vet school than med school because of the limited number of school programs. |
|
|
if there are National VocationalQualifications NVQ's the maybe we should have Notional Vacation Qualifications for those who neverbothered to show up |
|
|
// ... a BSc in medicine if you don't finish an MB, and there's also MB and ChB before MD, ... // |
|
|
is it an urban myth that a vet can treat a human but a doctor can't treat an animal? |
|
|
Yes, in the sense that people repeat it claiming they've "read it somewhere". |
|
|
People seem to repeat it as if it were a fact about legality of a procedure - in which case it would need a reference to a country and more detailed circumstances; I think it's just meant to point out that humans are animals, and that someone with a broader understanding of mammal anatomy would have a better chance of applying that in a specific case. Which is a little weird, in reality, since vets aren't necessarily generalists - as a vet, you'd probably know cats and dogs at a very detailed level where knowledge no longer easily transfers to other mammals. |
|
|
I think I told you this before but my dad was a pharmacist and he once tried to resuscitate a sick fish but it died. I hope he didn't break some law or some ethic code or something. |
|
|
What about promotions into doctorhood? There's gotta be some natural hands out there that just don't have the patience for med school. |
|
|
I would like there to be a profession involving knowledge and training in medicine, history-taking, physical examination and investigative procedures such as the analysis of blood and urine samples along with knowledge of drugs and other management which did not involve any actual treatment but rather allowed referrals to GPs or other health professionals. I think this would save a lot of resources and contribute a lot to preventive medicine. Doctors who hadn't got all the way through could sometimes still do that. |
|
|
[nineteenthly], there is such a thing, and it's called a nurse. |
|
|
// in which case it would need a reference to a country and more detailed circumstances // |
|
|
In England and Wales (Scotland may be different), a fully qualified vet may legally both treat (including surgery) and prescribe for a human, although this is frowned on by their professional bodies in anything other than a genuine emergency. It is an offence for vets to represent themselves as Doctors. Doctors are not permitted to treat any animal (other than their own) "for reward" i.e. charge for their services. |
|
|
I have myself received minor medical treatment from a vet. Having encountered exemplar specimens of both professions, I prefer vets to doctors. |
|
|
The emphasis in a nurse's education and profession is on care and empathy, which is desperately needed, but sometimes a more reductionist approach is required. That's what i meant. This is not in any way to criticise nurses, for whom i have great respect, but i am talking about education and training with a different emphasis. My experience tells me they don't have this, because it isn't relevant to their work. Nevertheless, there is a gap. I spend up to three hours with each patient, the average being around an hour and a half, at monthly intervals or less, and they can call on me 24/7/365 for free. That's the sort of support i'm talking about, and if that was properly available here, the government would save shedloads of money. |
|
|
That's the sort of profession i'm talking about, and failed doctors would most definitely often be up for this. |
|
| |