Osler said “Listen to your patient, he is telling you the diagnosis”. Duvefelt says “Listen to your patient, he is telling you what kind of doctor he needs you to be”.

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Blogroll (remodeling in progress)
Holiday Reflections
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Recent posts
- Dear Patient, If You Have to Treat a Cold, Know This:
- The Unreasonable Burden of Specialty Level Diagnostic Specificity in Primary Care
- Record Breaker!
- The Future of Doctoring is Already Here: Do More, Give Less Or Burn Out
- An Unusual Case of Meralgia Paresthetica
- Previsit Planning: What, Why and For Whom?
- Most Read Posts in 2021 (if not ever…)
- Happy New Year!
- Medicine, Like Survival and Living Well, is an Art
- A Country Doctor’s Christmas
- Doctor Playing Vet
- A Milestone in Child Mortality: Guns Kill More Kids Than Motor Vehicles Do
- Seizures: Low P, Low D and Lots of THC
- Doctors Working for Free
- Be Thankful for Ordinary Days
- My First Case of Restless Chest Syndrome?
- More Pictures From the Life of a Country Doctor
- The Dangers of EMR-Defaulted Prescription Stop Dates
- The Broken Promise of Computers in Healthcare: A Doctor From the B.C. Era Explains
- A Country Doctor’s Life
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I enjoy your comments and opinions. Last weekend, I was very lucky that I follow you. I found out that I was hacked, when I tried to comment. I did my research and found out that I was blocked. I always keep available phone numbers written down. I know, so old fashioned of me. With a landline, I was able to call my mobile phone company, PayPal, credit cards, etc. about how somebody managed to change recovery numbers and email accounts along with passwords. The phone agents were remarkably agreeable to helping me after I answered security questions, and they got hold of Google—meanwhile I hate bananas and strawberries. I do like spinach though. I feel very lucky that I like your common sense philosophy about medical practice.