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A dork lingers...is content. One thinks. Who knows?
A dork hopes you are well.
Back to the shade.
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Take care.
Be kind.
Dr Sam Blackman is a paediatric haematologist/oncologist from the US who is the host of Grand Rounds this week.
For any non-medical readers paed/haem/onc = little kiddies with cancer.
Tough gig.
Dr Blackman touches on the role of humour in grand rounds, and Dr Dork thinks this a salient point.
Change of
Humour is a useful tool in medical teaching, and in medical practice. From his psychiatry days, Dr Dork recalls it as a critical element of assessing a mental state properly.
Humour is, of course, a therapeutic tool in and of itself. Although Dr Hunter "Patch" Adams is a controversial figure, and Dr Dork disagrees to some extent with his extremely anti- “conventional” psychiatry stance, the message that humour does us good is beyond reproach.
In this spirit, Dr Dork would like to share some of his favourite humour sites. Please note, some are at times crude. In the tradition of FARK, the NSFW (not safe for work) tag will be applied for these, for those of you reading from a work computer.
Dork Humour
The Bloglines post notifier / reader / thingamajig, which Dr Dork opens even before his email nowadays when cranking up Old RustyTM , his venerable PC, is temperamental at best.
Oftentimes, little red exclamation points appear next to various blogs Dr Dork subscribes to. Usually, this is a transient software glitch. Going directly to a blog / site address bypasses such RSS or similar problems.
Today, Barbados Butterfly (link now inactive) was “flagged” in this manner.
Dr Dork had some trouble accessing the site, and presumed a glitch or gremlin was at play until just now reading this.
Dr Dork is very sad tonight.
As he has mentioned elsewhere, Dr Dork has been reading weblogs of non-medical nature for years, but only really began to appreciate the burgeoning of medical blogging in late 2005, not long before dipping his own toe sporadically into this great ocean of data.
Although the *cough* “honour” was never requested, this dork has long considered Dr Barb as one of his “blogparents”…whatever that means. If nothing else – it is a token of respect and admiration.
Dr Dork (to waiting room):
Mr Simia ?
Mr Simia stands. They enter office.
Dr Dork:
Hello, Mr Simia. Have a seat.
How are you today ?
Mr Simia:
G’day doc. F***ing al’right. Not too f***ing bad. F***ing hot, ‘ay ?
Dr Dork:
Boiling, isn’t it ? So, tell me about…..
(later)
Dr Dork:
And what operations have you had before ?
Mr Simia:
Couple ‘a things. My knee was f***ed for years.
Dr Dork:
….
Mr Simia:
Then Dr Amazing fixed it. ACL. Better than ever. It was f***ing f***ed for years before. He is absolutely f***ing amazing. Best f***ing doctor ever. Does all the footy players. Really f***ing good.
Dr Dork:
…
F*** oath. Good job, mate.
Dr Dork:
…
…and the other operation ?
Opened up me f***ing guts and ripped me appendix out. F***ing ripped it out.
Dr Dork:
OK then…
Uh..by the way...you know your appendix didn’t do you any good, anyway ? So no harm in losing it.
Mr Simia:
Well, why the f*** is it there then ? What f***ing good ?
Dr Dork:
Some people would say it is a vestigial evolutionary remnant. Of something useful at an earlier stage..
Mr Simia:
F***ing evolution ? What about that s*** anyway ? What f***ing proof ? Eh ? Why’s it there then if there’s evolution. Why we f***ing evolve it if it's no f***ing good ?
In particular, the heated debates arising amongst and between the principle sources of health bloggers : the
Although at present they appear at extremes in their philosophy of healthcare delivery - and funding thereof - they appear, from afar, to be gravitating towards each other.
Dr Dork knows little of fiscal matters, but it seems that in the
In
In theory, we have public hospitals and a fully government funded Medicare system to provide inpatient and outpatient care to all.
Australians, for the most part it seems, still subscribe to the ideology of providing healthcare to all – irrespective of income, employment status, or ability to pay.
Dr Dork disagrees profoundly with the viewpoint that access to basic healthcare is not a right, as some have suggested. Healthcare is a fundamental right common to all humanity. It is inhumane to deny treatment to those who cannot pay – directly or indirectly – just as it is inhumane to deny the starving food and water.
For many reasons healthcare costs will only continue to grow. As science advances, we live longer, and consume more health resources. We expect not just greater longevity, but greater quality of life.
What we gain in mortality, we lose in morbidity.
Our public healthcare system in