What has your doctor and hospital chosen not to know about stroke? Maybe something in a bunch of these? I'm sure there would have been a lot more but I didn't index these terms my first 5+ years of writing.
doctor competence? (145 posts to April 2023)
doctor incompetence (132 posts to October 2016)
doctor incompetence? (97 posts to April 2019)
doctor irresponsibility (3 posts to December 2021)
hospital competence? (17 posts to November 2023)
hospital incompetence (106 posts to October 2016)
hospital incompetence? (47 posts to August 2023)
in-hospital strokes (7 posts to July 2015)
don't have a functioning stroke doctor (229 posts to September 2022)
don't have a functioning stroke hospital (147 posts to December 2021)
I'll wait for all the doctor and hospital pushback on these and post exact replies with my opinion of the reply.
Seth's Blog : Willfully uninformed
Access to information used to be scarce. We ranked college libraries on how many books they had, and time at the microfilm reader was booked in advance.
Today, if there’s something I don’t know, it’s almost certainly because I haven’t cared enough to find out.
I don’t understand molecular biology, the history of Sardinia or much of agronomy–but that’s my choice. Now that information is widely and freely available, our sense of agency around knowledge needs to change.
It pays to acknowledge that this is a choice, and to be responsible for it. What else have we chosen not to know?
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