Sujet : Re: Job Offer
De : Sh (at) *nospam* dow.br (Shadow)
Groupes : rec.bicycles.techDate : 18. Mar 2025, 14:40:28
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Shadow
Message-ID : <k9titjd3n142c658glofrnp1bmvf4rb7jc@4ax.com>
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User-Agent : Forte Agent 3.3/32.846
On 18 Mar 2025 13:03:26 GMT, Roger Merriman <
roger@sarlet.com> wrote:
AMuzi <am@yellowjersey.org> wrote:
On 3/17/2025 9:49 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:
On 3/17/2025 6:21 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
I believe that the major reason I'm still
alive today is that I DON'T have a primary care physician.
That's odd. Based on two exciting experiences, I believe I
might not be alive now if I hadn't had a good primary care
physician.
As with university professors or bicycle mechanics, the
good ones are diligent, thorough and effective. The other
half not so much.
>
In my experience kinda depends on your situation Im somewhat a specialist
subject so GP tend to be a bit befuddled about me as they are generalist.
A good GP can diagnose (and treat, if the disease responds to
standard protocol medications) around 90% of all diseases. (I remember
the Queen's GP stating he could diagnose 94%, LOL).
A good GP will have enough experience to know when he has to
refer you to a specialist.
In your case he would probably refer you to a neurologist...
Most patients say a GP is "bad" or "incompetent" if they don't
agree with their own diagnosis.
Or sometimes a GP IS bad or incompetent.... Our local doctors
hired by "least salary" auctions are prime examples of that.
[]'s
PS Google gets around 80% of diagnosis right if you feed it
the most important symptoms. That means 20% of people that rely on
Google are taking the wrong medicine....
-- Don't be evil - Google 2004We have a new policy - Google 2012Google Fuchsia - 2021