Doctor's job or business?
In recent years, it has become apparent that young doctors tend to see their profession as a lucrative business. which also determines appropriate thinking. Therefore, it is no longer surprising that a young doctor may consider himself or herself to be too great a person to see and respect a person in a patient. Patients become inferior beings who can be treated as shamelessly as they can think of - they will endure everything in the same way, and they can simply be seen as a "tool" for career development. According to this way of thinking, a doctor can be very proud of himself and treat patients with contempt, because they are not worthy of him. You can evaluate a patient according to an imaginary standard, without being able to make a diagnosis, because you don't care what happens to the patient. Patients can be considered to be judged according to how much they can receive, and so on. You can just try to prove yourself in front of others. In all such cases, it is worthwhile for the doctor to think about the moral principles, or about their absence. Unfortunately, practical experience shows the same thing that has been seen in other similar institutions. Although no one says it directly, the behavior, behavior and attitude of the patient tells you - if you want to be treated like a human being here - pay for it. And if you want your health to be taken seriously, not just ridiculed - pay even more. If you don't want to do that, don't be surprised by the cynical attitude. However, if there is a suspicion that a patient may be complaining about something, they are immediately treated as 'hypocritical', as if the patient were still so naive as to believe in everything they have already seen.
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