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"The doctor who died did not diagnose the little girl who died" bah thats what headline said, silly papers... | |||
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"My old doctor was late 70's when he retired.. he's still around, plays golf and even sits in surgery now and then as a locum.. I remeber surfing the net one day and seeing this new lazer treatment for a scar... well he went into all the pro's and cons of light therapy this that and the other.. Knew more than I ever realised.. I wouldn't say he was past it at all!" With age comes wisdom and all that, Doctors don't usually have to do anything particularly physical, just have to use their heads. So, so long as they a healthy mentally how can they ever really be past it? | |||
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"I had flu jabs last year due to my asthma, was realy odd having to que up with a room full of 60-80 year olds :P especialy with my phobia of old people, i'm still waiting for logans run to be made active......" LMAO | |||
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" ............. Doctor was over 60! should people that old even still be allowed to practice medicine! personaly I belive they should be forced into a advisory role or teaching possition (after all how much has medicine changed since that guy passed midical school)" There's no substitute for experience. So long as a physician, particulary in general practice, keeps their knowledge and skills up to date you're probably safer in the care of an older doctor (Shipman excluded) than a younger one. GPs, particularly in multi-partner settings operate an informal and ongoing peer review to ensure the whole team is well versed in current thinking, diagnosing and prescribing. Some GP practices also operate as teaching units for local university medical schools and are externally evaluated by lecturers and professors to ensure a high standard. GPs are human and, as such, get stuff wrong sometimes. The fact it makes the papers shows how infrequently it happens. | |||
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