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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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082189
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08218900.046
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1990-09-19
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LETTERS, Page 4DOCTORS AND PATIENTS
Most of the physicians quoted in your story on the
doctor-patient relationship (LIVING, July 31) seem to believe the
root of the problem is the public's unrealistic expectations. They
are wrong. The great majority of patients merely want us to be
sympathetic, responsive and informative and to do our conscientious
best to care for them at the level of current medical capability.
We owe them no less.
Mark Cannon, M.D.
New York City
I doubt that compassion, understanding and desire to help can
be taught in medical school. These are qualities one acquires long
before becoming a doctor and are the prime factors motivating one
to pursue a career in medicine.
Vincent J. Menna, M.D.
Doylestown, Pa.
When we were beginning our internships this year, the marketing
director of our hospital bluntly told us that the care we provide
is the product the hospital has to sell and that the patients are
consumers. Fortunately, we decided to ignore that description,
believing we are physicians and our patients are people who are in
need of our help.
David Ryan Marks, M.D.
Los Angeles
Whose responsibility is it to maintain a healthy body day to
day? Patients often expect doctors to perform miracles that will
reverse the long-term effects of poor diet and exercise habits,
smoking, drinking and failing to take the initiative in managing
stress.
Mary Robinson
Kingston, N.Y.
After 32 years as a physician, I have discovered that while I
used to be a doctor and take care of patients, I am now a
health-care provider and take care of potential adversaries. It is
a sad state for both parties.
Rudi Kirschner, M.D.
Phoenix