the tests I told him to run later made it easy for a specialist to arrive at a diagnosis. Healing hands blessed are the hands find those places rarely touched poster Yes, told him to run. You can do that, it’s a thing! thank you for sharing your thoughts. My understanding of medicine is that the pendulum has swung far away from “paternalistic.”
Healing hands blessed are the hands find those places rarely touched poster
I respect all health care professionals. But current evidence is demonstrating that a paternalistic “treat the disease, not the person” approach does not work as well as a person-centred model. The semantics of it – “patient” as opposed to “client” – is illustrative of that old paradigm. Healing hands blessed are the hands find those places rarely touched poster That’s the current thinking, anyway. It has nothing to do with not respecting doctors. I bow down to modern medicine




and I am absolutely in awe of the level of intelligence and dedication required to become a good practitioner. It just has to do with that person-centred or family-centred model. This is probably less important in an acute/trauma/emergency setting than perhaps other settings like oncology or chronic diseases. I do feel bad for my PCP, though. He just couldn’t pin down a diagnosis for me and seemed so defeated. Luckily,
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