TransJenner
Banned
I wouldn't even wanna tbh , that's a huge risk , I couldn't live with myself if someone died in my hands
I think not being smart is a big barrier. If you cannot pass the science and biology classes to get an undergraduate degree, that's a good indicator (or reality check) to tell you that you aren't qualified to be a doctor.5) If you have interest, a sharp memory and psychomotor dexterity (like most average humans who are engaged in mental and physical activity), I don't see why somebody would neg rep me for stating that become a surgeon isn't as difficult as people make it seem to be...
ok but he had practice and years of training. Before all that he was just a person and not a surgeon. He learned that skill. Why couldn't anyone else?
it's working with your hands
if someone with some talent got the applied side of the training without all the theory you need for an MD and pre-med he'd probably be just as good
but people don't want random people with no real intelligence in the profession just cuz they have good dexterity, it's important enough that we only allow smart people to do it
like do you want someone cutting you up who doesn't really know what he's doing beyond "cut this, stitch this" etc. I want the one who spent his whole life learning about the human body and shyt, makes me feel safer
as long as you can manually do the work with high accuracy you're good for most shytAnyone with the patience, intelligence, and the endurance can become a surgeon in theory. But this isn't like working on cars or other forms of machinery (although they all have their training standards). This is a human body being operated on. Standards are rightfully higher because human life is highly regarded.
Theory provides you the context of why things happen and allows you to recognize situations as they occur. That combined with the applicable skill and experience allows a veteran surgeon to make decisions that can save a life that a surgeon with just technical skill can't.
This isn't just about making people 'feel' safer. It's about actually doing the job the correct way with all the challenges and pressures that operating on a human body comes forth. Malpractice lawsuits are a real thing.
as long as you can manually do the work with high accuracy you're good for most shyt
maybe an 8 year college+MD grad would have the broad background to do some exotic unprecedented shyt (like separating twins i guess since Carson was the first to do that) better than someone who did a 2 year trades program in surgery (if such a thing existed)
but pulling teeth, popping cysts, c-sections, anyone with the hand training can do that

i'm saying if there were no regulations (obviously that's impossible) u could train high school graduates to do routine surgeries pretty easily and they'd be fine at it, you could throw them in the same hands on programs that MDs go throughSo how do you measure someone who hasn't been through clinicals and spent time in residency accurate enough to do these types of things you describe? Because I'll tell you it takes a hell of a lot longer than 2 years. Even if such a thing existed, the cost to insure such an individual would be so high a hospital isn't going to take a chance on hiring that person. Starting a private practice would be damn near impossible if one can't afford or can't get insurance.
i'm saying if there were no regulations (obviously that's impossible) u could train high school graduates to do routine surgeries pretty easily and they'd be fine at it, you could throw them in the same hands on programs that MDs go through
every high paying profession has a way higher standard for entry than to actually do the work
most software engineers don't use heavy algorithms and theory but they're expected to know it for a job interview, consultants and investment bankers don't need to know anything in particular except basic applied finance / business math but u need a 3.8 from a top 30 school to get an interview, etc
measuring fluids?Okay. Let's strip away everything regulatory and say high schoolers are eligible to go through training. You really think someone with a high school education (ie lacking the basic knowledge you gain from the sciences in college) can perform the procedures necessary to perform routine surgeries? Proper measuring of fluids? Application of fluids? Injections? Incisions? Precise cutting within a decimeter?
Then, going ahead and doing this all under pressure?
Nah fam, I don't agree with you at all.

since basic sciences are so important to daily life as a doctor