Evidence also suggests that trepanation was primitive emergency surgery after head wounds[4] to remove shattered bits of bone from a fractured skull and clean out the blood that often pools under the skull after a blow to the head. Hunting accidents, falls, wild animals, and weapons such as clubs or spears could have caused such injuries. Trepanations appear to have been most common in areas where weapons that could produce skull fractures were used.[5] — Wikipedia
expert — synthesis
In the end, it should be YOU who is making the decisions because nobody cares about your health like you. If you are going to defer to an expert, then you are going to treated by a physician doing the best they can, but that's not nearly good enough.
Don't leave something as important as your health to the experts because you never know when they are going to take the drill out of their black bag and... — synthesis
And yet doctors and other medical professionals routinely expect their patients to blindly trust them and obey them. They hate an informed patient. — baker
The problem is that our youth is spent absorbing knowledge and our dotage is spent gaining experience and so, quite naturally, we're all dead by the time the word "expert" is applicable to us. — TheMadFool
Don't leave something as important as your health to the experts because you never know when they are going to take the drill out of their black bag and... — synthesis
Very Socrates of you..ha — schopenhauer1
Never discount the value of your knowledge when you go to the see your doctor. Tell him/her everything you can remember about your issue. You have no idea how much this helps! — synthesis
people are too damn lazy. — synthesis
I always come to doctors (and most any kind of expert) with all the information I can and what analysis I’ve done of it myself and where I got stuck trying to figure it all out myself (which is why I’m now seeking expert help)... and more often than not come away with an off-the-shelf non-solution that doesn’t account for most of the details of my particular case. — Pfhorrest
The government-corporate coalition that controls health care pretty much everywhere is about as authoritarian as it gets. In the U.S., un-affordable medical/hospital bills are the number one cause of personal bankruptcy and has been for many years.Hopefully, my fears of totalitarian authority are not going to come into medicine and the direction will be one of empowering people to make their own decisions about health. — Jack Cummins
Based on my experience of working in England, it is hard to balance the emphasis on quality of patient care and statistics. I think that it fluctuates, but both are seen as important. — Jack Cummins
That's like hoping that the guy who rapes your sister is (at least) good looking. The answer is to get rid of the government and the corporations and give health care back to individuals and very small companies.At the moment, we have government funded healthcare, and I just hope it continues. — Jack Cummins
I think that if England lost the NHS it would be the biggest misfortune for England. — Jack Cummins
R-i-g-h-t! Plato buries this in at least one of his dialogues. The idea is if you wish to train your horses, can everyone do it? Answer: no. The right choice is to find the man who knows how to train horses, and similarly with children. To the cobbler for shoes, and so forth. Because they are the ones who know how.(just like the solution to education is to make each parent responsible for their children's education) . — synthesis
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