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by vacri 4315 days ago
The truth is most doctors get paid a lot because people erroneously assign to them the ethos of miracle workers, when most of them aren't.

They get paid a lot because they have the training to both recognise and know what to do with the edge cases. Yes, the bulk of patients can be treated with the same steps, and the nursing staff can do most of that stuff without problem. But doctors are there to watch for the edge cases, and for odd cases, discuss it with their peers. Regular meetings where doctors go over uncommon issues patients are having - you may not see it when you're on the ward itself, but it's part of the process, spreading the diagnostic load, keeping skills up, and improving outcomes for the patient.

If you really want to help people, you don't become a regular doctor.

A friend's father stopped being a gynaecologist and returned to family-practise GP, because he felt like he could help people better that way, and keep himself more interested in medicine because it was more diverse an environment. In neither environment was he saving lives, but he was still helping people. The two are not synonymous.

Your comment comes off as personally bitter, and I think insulting to folks like GPs who do help people even if they aren't literally saving lives as part of daily practice. You also seem to have conflated 'finding new cures' with 'what a doctor does', the latter of which has a lot of 'applying found cures' to it, and certainly helps people.