Originally posted by Wickerman
View Post
Just remember that surgical training back then was not the same. The same system was in play, but a medical student's experience depended entirely on his instructor. Some surgeons allowed students to participate in surgery. Some surgeons turned the whole thing over to students and kicked back with a coffee watching. And some surgeons were determined that their students would not so much as touch a patient until they passed their boards. A student working a charity hospital was far more experienced a doctor than a student at a private university. So knowledge and skill commensurate with a medical student could equal that of any modern surgeon. Or could equal that of my cousin Jess, who still tries to pee on people's jellyfish stings.
But Maura Tierney, who played a doctor on TV saved her husband's life by correctly diagnosing a burst appendix and getting him to the ER. So there is some validity to the idea that simply seeing something several times is enough for some people to execute.
Comment