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by jmoak
582 days ago
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While residencies have existed since well before Medicare was passed, they were mostly something elites pursued. Overall, residency wasn't an absolutely necessary practice until the mid-late 20th century. By the 70s, with the tailwind of the baby boom, the practice became normalized. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Residency_(medicine)#:~:text=B... Our demographic makeup means we have more elderly in need of care and fewer to care for them, which means we will need to revert our requirements. The UK is already discussing/planning-for this in their healthcare system: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/nurses-doctors-deg... I understand that it's scary that care quality may be lower, but that argument is similar to demanding that every road worker and civil engineer have a PhD. Our bridges and roads would likely be better if all participants were so educated and qualified, at least for the horrifically expensive and few roads/bridges we would be able to build. |
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