Most doctors in
the UK will, or more importantly should, be part of a a medical defence
organization. In the UK there ae 2 major players the Medical Defence Union
established in 1885 and the Medical Protection Society established in 1892.
For those less bright, like
our 2 previous Prime Ministers, there is also the Medical and Dental Defence
Union of Scotland established 1902 whose premiums are a lot less than elsewhere
presumably because the standard of medicine, or more importantly the standard
of knowledge there, is less?
(In house joke before you
reach for your claymores but it is a mute point at ND Central that some GPs'
costs are more equal than others for the same job).
So for all of us idle GPs
who spend 5 days a week on the golf course ignoring our patients a full time
golfing GP will pay between £ 5,600 to just under £ 6,000 a year depending on
which society they are with and when their subscription is renewed (tax
deductable of course comrades).
The money we GPs pay is
usually well spent but an article, nay two articles, one in the opinion section
of one of the defense unions' rags one week and then a second in the next
edition made some of us wonder whether their usual true objectivity in
providing us with medicolegal good practice and advice has become watered down?
A doctor, whose true role
within in the medical profession is not well known, has given his
"informed" opinion on online reviews. What is even more worrying is
the fact that the page before a "content lead" from NHS Choices gives
their "expert" advice on responding to online reviews. Both articles
are of dubious or doubtful benefit to your average GP on the links. NHS Choices
we have commented on before here and here.
We will not give
a direct link to the doctor's own website but would say that using it (or using
NHS Choices) is a bit like reading the Dead Sea Scrolls to find a good doctor
today. Years out of date with large gaps and pieces missing and references to the then living being erroneous.
What is more
this doctor is also speaking to conferences organized by one of the above
defence organizations. So the question we have here at ND Central is in the
title of the piece.
Are we as doctors getting
value for our annual subscription monies from one particular defence
organization's spending for what we are sure are works of medicolegal
excellence (not) and speeches to conferences that we are sure will be being
provided as charitable works from which we we will all benefit from?
2 comments:
May I point out with the benefit of my Scottish 'O' level English (circa 1970), a 'mute' point surely means saying nothing at all. I would think you meant a 'moot' point.
And now you see that the pen (keyboard) is indeed mightier than the sword (claymore).
Just been informed that the super-duper, do-it-all, never fail computer system that we use is about to be upgraded. So, back to pen and paper for a week.
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