"Like blood, health care is too precious, intimate and corruptible to entrust to the market"
Woolhandler & Himmelstein "When Money is the Mission –The High Cost of Investor-Owned Care," New England Journal of Medicine. 1999
The full text of the speech in case you prefer to read it (and it is quicker to read) is below.
5 comments:
This notion of "care" is a myth. The ability to "care" has nothing to do with one's occupation - it has to do with the sort of person you are and what matters to you in the way you relate to other people.
I trained as a doctor for pragmatic reasons. Not because I "care" about people. I do care about them, but I could be just as caring if I were a milkman, a pig farmer or a prime minister.
I would myself not choose to be a patient of a doctor whose prime motive for taking up medicine was because they were by nature "caring". Because it distracts them from the rather cold pathways of sound clinical decision making. But I would certainly expect courtesy, respect and consideration.
That said, I know my patients thought me "caring" and I received many accolades in that respect. But they were confusing "care" I think with good manners.
"I could be just as caring if I were a milkman, a pig farmer or a prime minister."
Sure, but each of those, if moral enough, will care while providing his/her own service/profession, one hopes.
"I would myself not choose to be a patient of a doctor whose prime motive for taking up medicine was because they were by nature "caring". Because it distracts them from the rather cold pathways of sound clinical decision making. But I would certainly expect courtesy, respect and consideration.
It seems "caring" here means "soft", only part of medical caring is to always strive to act in the patient's interest and make the right decisions. That is by no means "soft"!
"That said, I know my patients thought me "caring" and I received many accolades in that respect. But they were confusing "care" I think with good manners."
Although good manners are a must for any good doctor, I don't think your patients are confusing this with "caring" from my perspective, because that has a big element of morality in it [making the right decisions at the right time with the patient's best interest at heart] ... not every doctor does that ... but you do, the reason why your patient's believe you are "caring", because most probably you are!
Please consider linking this inspirational piece to 'Air Your Views' on DNUK. Thanks, David
Feel free to post this video as you wish, Brambo. The embed code is freely available so I presume the owners of the copyright don't mind.
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