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by jepper
3768 days ago
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Very interesting article, his previous book 'The emperor of all maladies' is also highly recommended. A lot of medicine is not level III evidence or better backed. As both a doctor (surgical attending) and programmer medicine feels not just like debugging a very complex non linear machine. Patient psychology is one of the hardest parts of the job. Is the stomach pain caused by a psychical problem or can it be functional?
The use of protocols (part of the science) can help in catching non typical presentations of illnesses, especially if the patient is not adequate in presentation (drunk, very young, old, trauma etc). But sometimes medicine comes down to an art, when you have the feeling something does not add up, you have to dig. The same with (older) attendings with very attuned diagnostic skills due to lots of experience that can help solve non-obvious cases. |
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One way in which medicine is not like debugging is the hours spent by a physician vs a programmer. I (as a programmer) have sometimes spent 100 hours tracking down a bug whereas I've never seen a physician spend more than a few minutes trying to diagnose an illness.
Even with a gravely ill person, my experience has been that an attending physician has never spent more than about 15 minutes on the diagnosis (or to be a bit more generous, let's say several 15-minute re-evaluations as new information came to light, such as blood test results).
It's a strange contrast. I considered my bugs to be serious bugs, and it was worth 100 hours to diagnose it correctly. But my bugs are nothing compared to a human life. Why is our medical system OK with quick diagnosis? Does it all come down to money or would more time available to the physician make no difference because [medicine is art not science / some other reason]?