It is my hope all confidence in the pharma/medical cartel and their running dogs, the 3rd party payers, will be lost forever. Medical practice in the future will need to be rebuilt from the ground up and rightly so.
It is my hope all confidence in the pharma/medical cartel and their running dogs, the 3rd party payers, will be lost forever. Medical practice in the future will need to be rebuilt from the ground up and rightly so.
I was at a coffee shop today and 2 Arizona Mayo med students were studying next to me. I kept my mouth shut for a long time but then talked with them. They were very polite to me. I told them I used to be a surgeon. Both of them wanted to be internists and we briefly discussed the differences between the specialties. The strange thing to me was how different medicine is today. The over reliance on imaging, subspeciality referrals, lack of basic physical examination skills. I was lucky to have practiced when medicine was great.
In the end I just taught them some clinical pearls about hand and facial trauma, and they were completely mesmerized. Maybe there is hope.
When I was 16 yo, I was downloading data from the BioSat III mission at NASA. The project physician did his best to talk me out of going into medicine. He told me all that would await me. The year was 1970.... things became far worse than even his worse nightmarish predictions. But one has to understand we are under the influence of the medical cartel and the biosecurity state and they have used medicine as part of their plans to take over the world and depopulate most of us, so what would one expect to be taking place.
Their plans will fail and it is my hope that they will completely destroy the old paradigm in the process.
I have no idea where this will end. Just know that I cared for a lot of patients and did my best. In reality I wanted to be a pilot not a doctor but had a congenital eye problem.
Non-medical people won't get this, but I do as a 72-year-old retired nurse.
Thing is technology has transformed our society. In some cases, for better and other not so much. I was taught that medicine was the art of healing and compassion. When I was a young nurse CT and MRI did not exist. Sure, technology has its part but if you do not care for and touch and talk with your patients it is just inhumane.
It is my hope all confidence in the pharma/medical cartel and their running dogs, the 3rd party payers, will be lost forever. Medical practice in the future will need to be rebuilt from the ground up and rightly so.
I was at a coffee shop today and 2 Arizona Mayo med students were studying next to me. I kept my mouth shut for a long time but then talked with them. They were very polite to me. I told them I used to be a surgeon. Both of them wanted to be internists and we briefly discussed the differences between the specialties. The strange thing to me was how different medicine is today. The over reliance on imaging, subspeciality referrals, lack of basic physical examination skills. I was lucky to have practiced when medicine was great.
In the end I just taught them some clinical pearls about hand and facial trauma, and they were completely mesmerized. Maybe there is hope.
When I was 16 yo, I was downloading data from the BioSat III mission at NASA. The project physician did his best to talk me out of going into medicine. He told me all that would await me. The year was 1970.... things became far worse than even his worse nightmarish predictions. But one has to understand we are under the influence of the medical cartel and the biosecurity state and they have used medicine as part of their plans to take over the world and depopulate most of us, so what would one expect to be taking place.
Their plans will fail and it is my hope that they will completely destroy the old paradigm in the process.
I have no idea where this will end. Just know that I cared for a lot of patients and did my best. In reality I wanted to be a pilot not a doctor but had a congenital eye problem.
Non-medical people won't get this, but I do as a 72-year-old retired nurse.
Thing is technology has transformed our society. In some cases, for better and other not so much. I was taught that medicine was the art of healing and compassion. When I was a young nurse CT and MRI did not exist. Sure, technology has its part but if you do not care for and touch and talk with your patients it is just inhumane.