Re: Medical Help Vs. Religious Beliefs
Posted: Wed Apr 07, 2010 8:02 pm
Thank you.Tyyr wrote:If you're tired you slow down and pay extra attention, not jam it in and go rooting around hoping to get lucky.
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Thank you.Tyyr wrote:If you're tired you slow down and pay extra attention, not jam it in and go rooting around hoping to get lucky.
Hence line two of my comment. Perhaps it's wishful thinking, but I would find it slightly less worrying that the staff are simply bored and careless than truly incompetent.Tsukiyumi wrote:When I worked at Domino's Pizza, we once made 150 pizzas in one hour. Not one of them was returned or complained about. Why? We gave a sh*t about our work. Is your reason valid? To a degree; even if you're tired and bored, you should have pride in your work, especially if your work involves people's health and sick people's comfort.
It doesn't, as you'd have realised if you read past line one of my original post.Tsukiyumi wrote:Okay; how does that excuse incompetent practice of their field?
You mean it would, in fact, be the same thing. Regardless of the excuse, incompetence is incompetence. I understand your point perfectly: if you took the best F1 driver in the world and had him run the same course for 18 straight hours, he'd begin to get rather sloppy. The difference is, I suspect that he'd slow down and be more careful deliberately.Captain Seafort wrote:Bad, or simply getting careless and sloppy because of doing it a hundred times a day? The appearance would be the same.
If you're suggesting that the staff is overworked, I agree. We need more physicians, nurses, orderlies, etc. This doesn't change the outcome.Captain Seafort wrote:It's not my intention to excuse said carelessness, simply to suggest a reason.
Well, how else will they get experience, right?Tyyr wrote:The people doing the sticking are rarely the highly trained or highly skilled people. Those are usually prioritized to areas where their talents are more useful. Most of the people I've been stuck by, outside of a blood bank, were usually the newbies.
I don't disagree with the practice, I just think those in charge should either take more time making sure the newbie knows what they're doing, or make themselves available before the newbie turns the inside of my elbow to hamburger.Tsukiyumi wrote:Well, how else will they get experience, right?
I'd use the analogy of driving down a dead-straight road for hours on end, but your point is made.Tsukiyumi wrote:You mean it would, in fact, be the same thing. Regardless of the excuse, incompetence is incompetence. I understand your point perfectly: if you took the best F1 driver in the world and had him run the same course for 18 straight hours, he'd begin to get rather sloppy. The difference is, I suspect that he'd slow down and be more careful deliberately.
Tyyr wrote:If you're tired you slow down and pay extra attention, not jam it in and go rooting around hoping to get lucky.
Thank you.Captain Seafort wrote:I'd use the analogy of driving down a dead-straight road for hours on end, but your point is made.Tsukiyumi wrote:You mean it would, in fact, be the same thing. Regardless of the excuse, incompetence is incompetence. I understand your point perfectly: if you took the best F1 driver in the world and had him run the same course for 18 straight hours, he'd begin to get rather sloppy. The difference is, I suspect that he'd slow down and be more careful deliberately.
In other words, awful.Tyyr wrote:I know exactly how it sounded, clumsy and awkward just like teenage sex.
Either one really, the result is the same.Captain Seafort wrote:
Bad, or simply getting careless and sloppy because of doing it a hundred times a day? The appearance would be the same.
It's not my intention to excuse said carelessness, simply to suggest a reason.