What Are They Thinking?

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Balanced Rock
Balanced Rock
6 months ago

I am pretty sure this has already quietly been going on in many states. Whether it is legal or not, I don’t know. It used to not be allowed. I know a hospital emergency room assigned my daughter a ‘doctor’ who had graduated from an African hospital. He told her that they had had success with cutting the heart in two. His suggestion was insane and unheard of. He gave her medicine that wiped her out so much that she couldn’t lift her head up from the pillow. Then she refused the medicine and got out of the hospital. She lived about four more years. No one here seemed interested in helping her and she became afraid of medical intervention. She died in June. I miss her dearly.

Defiant Grunt
Defiant Grunt
6 months ago

This is horrific.
Two months ago a DEI doctor almost killed me.
If I had not countered her instructions and taken myself to the ER for a second opinion and immediate treatment I would have died.

General 'Buck' Turgidson
General 'Buck' Turgidson
6 months ago

Let me lay some painful truth to you all out there. Even Americans train in foreign medical schools and return to the USA to practice. And most of these foreign medical schools are on par–or even surpass schools here in the USA. There are tons of foreign doctors who’ve passed the medical boards here in the USA and are practicing. Foreign trained medical professionals are nothing new. If you think you are going to exclusively get white-bread, born and raised American only as your MD, you are delusional. We have a shortage of medical professionals and these foreign types get faster access to immigration than your average turd-world schlubs.
Using my medicare–I have access to a top medical provider in the USA, UCLA school of medicine. The Doc that just took out my kidney stones is tops in his field and head of the Urology department–and I just met one of his top attending physician (a foreigner BTW) who is studying under him in a six month exclusive fellowship (hard to get into BTW).

Now yes, there are less qualified foreign physicians who manage to pass state boards–and you can usually find these types in the po-dunk regions of the USA where they are hard pressed to attract top-notch talent. And I would be very warry of these types. You should do a thorough background check online on the ratings and complaints against physicians which is easily done these days. The bad ones will stand out like sore thumbs and should be avoided.

Last edited 6 months ago by General 'Buck' Turgidson
General 'Buck' Turgidson
General 'Buck' Turgidson
6 months ago
Reply to  DRenegade

This is probably good for smaller stones which can actually pass and helps them to pass… but in my case I make them like stalactites for some reason and take potassium citrate (a strong supplement) to control them. The stone which my doc took out two weeks ago was 4 cm and in a hard place to remove. 5 years ago, they removed one that was almost 10 cm–and this required invasive surgery.. My UCLA doc has new tools and methods which have not as of yet reached the general practice as of yet.

thexrayboy
thexrayboy
6 months ago

As long as any “doctor” has the money to pay for their state licenses nobody really cares about their actual qualifications…

Sgt. Schulz
Sgt. Schulz
6 months ago

No telling the truth or accuracy of this story. Plausible for sure, but why would credentialed and indebted doctors not be throwing a hissy fit about this?
You will notice ole girls prominently displayed star of Raphaim. It is difficult to extend any acceptance of credibility to anyone associated with the tribe.

General 'Buck' Turgidson
General 'Buck' Turgidson
6 months ago
Reply to  Sgt. Schulz

FYI–there’s no state in this country which does not have licensing and board requirements to pass before a doctor sets up their practice. Some Mo-Mo from turd-I-stan cannot just show up and hang out an MD shingle and start practicing medicine as implied in this video.

But yes, the boards in some states just have minimum requirements to pass–and some less-than-skillful, less knowledgeable MD’s could take advantage of this. It’s up to you not to be a bobble-head, nodding yes, to some MD no matter what they tell you (as many people do).

Pastor Guest
Pastor Guest
6 months ago

I don’t know if this is true, but the fact that some states give out CDL’s to unqualified foreigners who can’t speak English or read road signs lends some credence to the story.

Delta3Two
Delta3Two
6 months ago
Reply to  Pastor Guest

You’re spot on PADRE.

kal kal
kal kal
6 months ago

If you live there, boycott them, they are poorly trained. I have had the experience here in Hawaii of dealing with two, an Indian and a Pakistani. Terrible manners and I knew more about my problem than the Pakistani doctor did. Disgusting.

General 'Buck' Turgidson
General 'Buck' Turgidson
6 months ago
Reply to  kal kal

The Jeets and the paki’s are the ones taking advantage of our immigration system favoring MD’s. Unless they are attached to some top-notch medical group, school or hospital I’d pass of these M-fers in a heart beat. Where I go (UCLA) you have to be in the top 5% to even be considered, so I don’t have any problem with these foreign born MD’s. My cardio guy is from Lebanon and is one of the top guys in his field–in one of the top 5 hospitals in the USA.

Now if you go to Dr. Denesh De-Scumbag, who operates out a a strip mall location, somewhere in West Virginia… then I’d be very wary of whatever you get out of him.

Mary C
Mary C
6 months ago

Difficult for me to attach much credibility to this dialog. The doctors in question might be as bad as they say, but they have made that determination based on religion and country of origin – which are not valid criteria for this question. The only valid points coming out of the discussion are 1) bad method of appointment of the medical board (albeit ‘unelected’ is not really a valid point either. Board members need to be competent, not chosen on popularity or name recognition) and 2) cancellation of the requirement for recertifying with some US experience. Everything else in this conversation seems to fall in the category of “ain’t it awful”.

Joe Blow
Joe Blow
6 months ago

That the medical field would stand by and let this happen is surprising!
They’re if nothing else a trade union, and letting scabs work the line is verbotten!

Raymond
Raymond
6 months ago

Stay as healthy as you can. Eat healthy food, stay away from processed and sugary food, exercise, no alcohol, no smioking, if you are fat lose it, and stay away from doctors. There are many bad doctors out there of all races and ages.

Martha
Martha
6 months ago

The medical industry is on a downward spiral! Lord have mercy!