home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- 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
-