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As Joe P. corrected me, I am a first-year resident (called myself intern out of ease of typing, though technically--and confusingly--there are places and situations where you are an intern but not a first-year resident). Both my attendings and I have the same degree (MD--except for the DO attendings but I don't want to get into that complication now because there's so little difference) but not the same license...and I won't have an equivalent license for another few years...and now I'm distracted enough that I've lost track of what you were trying to say in the first place anyhow. :)Dr.ex, thanks for the information. However, the example I gave was that of a resident and an attending, both of whom are MDs.
(MD--except for the DO attendings but I don't want to get into that complication now because there's so little differenceDo you mean the OMM that most of us don't use or the philosophical differences that aren't really there anymore?
dr-exmedic said:(MD--except for the DO attendings but I don't want to get into that complication now because there's so little differenceDo you mean the OMM that most of us don't use or the philosophical differences that aren't really there anymore?
/OMS1 at COMP who's already sick and tired of hearing how "special" it is...
The only time I've ever seen OMM in use was at one slower community ED, where the one DO used to fix some of the nurses' backs for them every so often. :)Do you mean the OMM that most of us don't use or the philosophical differences that aren't really there anymore?
The only time I've ever seen OMM in use was at one slower community ED, where the one DO used to fix some of the nurses' backs for them every so often. :)Do you mean the OMM that most of us don't use or the philosophical differences that aren't really there anymore?
It doesn't seem like their should be, but I've heard it come up a lot. When I asked one of my supervisors a question about a nursing facility doing CPR on a person with a DNR and if I was allowed to respect the patients wishes and not run the code when I took over care(I'm a paramedic, they called 911), he told me no because a nurse is a higher level of licensure and I should do whatever he/she says.
Skip Kirkwood said:Different, for sure.
I don't know if there is such thing as a hierarchy of licenses.
Let's not be too hard on folks asking legitimate questions. Just because some of us have already discussed this and formed conclusions, doesn't mean that somebody else can't legitimately begin the critical thinking process.
To say that there is "no relevance" to the comparison is a conclusion that you can only reach after a certain amount of study, discussion, research, etc. Although it may have been "asked and answered" for you, it may be a question of first impression for another member.
Give 'em a break!
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