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in reply to kip

When I was in the hospital (UCSF) a few years ago with a really bad infection, the doctors were all amazing, and the nurses were an extremely mixed bag in this respect.
This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to Ben Weinstein-Raun

I wonder why this is! I figure it has to do with the fact that doctors are so much more intelligent (on average) and require so much more training than nurses. (Lots of things are downstream from that)
in reply to kip

I think nurses spend more of their time doing uncomfortable things to patients, and they have less say over what needs to be done, so I'm not surprised if some of them develop an insensitivity to patient complaints.
in reply to kip

in reply to Nikki Bee

Hi there!

Yeah, IME, it feels like nurses are working with checklists, whereas doctors are more oriented around actually solving my problem. (This is part of what I was thinking with "doctors are more intelligent and require more training" -- their work involves much more cognitive labor.)

It confuses me, though, that I get so much pressure and pushback when I say "I don't want to do X." Do they get reprimanded for failing to complete procedures, even when the reason is "the patient refused"?

Childbirth is one of the most intense experiences someone can go through, so this sounds really bad in that context! I'm glad there's pushback.

in reply to kip

I'm talking second-hand and haven't done either job myself, but I get the impression that's part of it: nurses are often carrying out treatment decisions that someone else (hospital policy or a doctor) has made. I've also heard of places having a pretty dysfunctional culture of hierarchy where it's not considered OK for a very experienced nurse to question the decision of a doctor, which I've gotta imagine can fit into this type of situation.

My impression is that this isn't about individual intelligence so much as that one is a job which entrusts them with decision-making authority and budgets time to learn about the needs of the patient into the work day, and the other is a job which about carrying out work planned by other people (routine things determined by hospital policy, or patient-specific stuff decided by a doctor/surgeon).

in reply to kip

FWIW, my experience has been that nurses are often more concerned about the discomfort than I am, and almost never less concerned. But maybe this is mostly due to the kinds of things I've experienced in hospitals. Like, I've had lots of things with very minor discomfort where I'm not bothered by it, but they warn me or try to be supportive about it, because some people care a lot. And then I've had things that are super painful, but they know this, warn me before hand, and they try really hard to make it less bad. But I think there are intermediate cases where the thing really sucks, but it's not quite in the "obviously extremely painful" category, where there can be a significant disconnect between patient experience and provider concern.
in reply to Rick Korzekwa

I'm glad you've had a good time with nurses. There's a lot of variance, so I expect many people feel this way overall.

I think there are intermediate cases where the thing really sucks, but it's not quite in the "obviously extremely painful" category, where there can be a significant disconnect between patient experience and provider concern.

Yes -- I think in many of these situations, the provider does not believe that the patient is suffering as much as they claim. As a patient, it's very distressing. I've had a lot of good healthcare experiences as well, but bad experiences have the potential to be intensely bad.