"doctor" means teacher
Wednesday, 26 May 2010 10:09 pmI just looked online for some information for a friend who had a brain scan in an attempt to find an explanation for her terrible headaches. Apparently she has a lesion in her right basal ganglia. Now that area is a fairly large and complex part of the brain so it could have many possible effects. I was trying to learn more about it and found a site called Medcyclopedia. It had some tiny thumbnail images that looked like they might be of use, but unfortunately I would have to register in order to view the full-size images. I always find this compulsory narrowing of audience annoying, but annoyance turned to disgust when I found that in order to register I had to "prove" I was a professional by clicking the aortic lumen in the image presented, only to find that the page was so incompetently designed that it didn't work on any web browser other than Microsoft's awful and dangerous InternetExplorer, which fewer and fewer people use these days.
What is with medical groups that they are so loathe to disseminate information to the public at large? Don't they know that the word "doctor" originally meant "teacher"? Everywhere around the world there is a shortage of medical doctors. And the doctors themselves generally would like to be able to spend more time with their patients and less time on trivial things. They also bemoan the rise of nutty strains of "alternative" medicine, such as chiropracty or homeopathy, but they seem utterly opposed to disseminating the very knowledge which would drive back such superstitious beliefs.
Sometimes I think the medical profession is its own worst enemy.
What is with medical groups that they are so loathe to disseminate information to the public at large? Don't they know that the word "doctor" originally meant "teacher"? Everywhere around the world there is a shortage of medical doctors. And the doctors themselves generally would like to be able to spend more time with their patients and less time on trivial things. They also bemoan the rise of nutty strains of "alternative" medicine, such as chiropracty or homeopathy, but they seem utterly opposed to disseminating the very knowledge which would drive back such superstitious beliefs.
Sometimes I think the medical profession is its own worst enemy.
Re: about chiropracty
Date: 2010-05-28 08:40 am (UTC)Relief Without Drugs, that sounds interesting.
I'm not really surprised it could work. I've got friends who hang from hooks for the fun of it and I would have done the same by now except I could never come up with a good enough reason to bother. I do have some other experience with transmuting pain.
Every new pain is a new instance though and it's kinda like starting again from scratch remembering how not to mind. I taught myself how not to mind though, might be good to read someone else's thoughts on it.
The gas in the joints, where does it come from, where does it go?
Even if it is like little hammers we're not banging up against the bubbles with the frequency that steel propellers do, so I figure we can worry about it less. Also, steel is harder than anything in our bodies, and in cold water it has even less give. Our bodies are a bit more giving, which is probably good.