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Nahm those tests are defensive mnedicine â they get sued for everything. Look at the breast implants and lupus scare. paid millions, later prioved groundless. Or vaccines and thimerosol. Even Lancet, i think it was, revoked the article
Seems like a wise doctor. He can also thank Lila for notifying (or warning) him about the blonde. Yep, the drawing is different in this one.Not that I wanted to get onto the subject, but Iâd sure like to be able to sign a waiver and request âold technology,â say 1970âs medicine? that I can afford. If the trouble/illness warrants better technology, let the patient decide if theyâll utilize (and pay for) higher technology. Have congress pass laws allowing this, which also prohibit anyone opting for it, no right to sue (including lawyers) if bad results occur. It might sound naive, butâŠ
This strip kind of sums up my opinion about most of these âattention deficitâ things.People just donât want to pay attention to stuff thatâs boring.When itâs interesting, somehow every eyeball is glued to it, and everybody remembers most of it. When itâs boring, suddenly even the drying paint seems more fascinating.So Iâm thinking, perhaps with some exceptions, kids and adults donât really have âattention deficitâ as much as the rigid, constrained, one-size-fits-all school and work systems today have an âinterest deficit.â
The Nihilist about 12 years ago
Gotta love the bead rattler who will hold up the reality check mirror once in a while. Most just run up a bill performing unnecessary testsâŠ
flyintheweb about 12 years ago
Nahm those tests are defensive mnedicine â they get sued for everything. Look at the breast implants and lupus scare. paid millions, later prioved groundless. Or vaccines and thimerosol. Even Lancet, i think it was, revoked the article
skeeterhawk about 12 years ago
Seems like a wise doctor. He can also thank Lila for notifying (or warning) him about the blonde. Yep, the drawing is different in this one.Not that I wanted to get onto the subject, but Iâd sure like to be able to sign a waiver and request âold technology,â say 1970âs medicine? that I can afford. If the trouble/illness warrants better technology, let the patient decide if theyâll utilize (and pay for) higher technology. Have congress pass laws allowing this, which also prohibit anyone opting for it, no right to sue (including lawyers) if bad results occur. It might sound naive, butâŠ
JWF Premium Member about 12 years ago
@nihilist, I donât think simpsonfan is worried. I think he wants to meet her ;-)
Peachguy82 about 12 years ago
Doc! Oh, how I miss anything that can be a reference to the âold daysâ (âold daysâ meaning the new strips).
geedavey about 12 years ago
âHi, Iâm your doctor from the â70âs. You have cancer, youâre gonna die, sorry, thereâs not a thing I can do about it.â
Still sure about that trade, Skeeterhawk?
skeeterhawk about 12 years ago
@ geedavey: Yup. I canât afford the treatment anyway. Thatâs my point.
Zaristerex about 12 years ago
Nope, no ADD. Lila is just lazy and inattentive on purpose!
Pharmakeus Ubik about 12 years ago
Lila definitely has AADD. Sheâs not getting nearly as much adult attention as she deserves and desires.
Phatts about 12 years ago
This strip kind of sums up my opinion about most of these âattention deficitâ things.People just donât want to pay attention to stuff thatâs boring.When itâs interesting, somehow every eyeball is glued to it, and everybody remembers most of it. When itâs boring, suddenly even the drying paint seems more fascinating.So Iâm thinking, perhaps with some exceptions, kids and adults donât really have âattention deficitâ as much as the rigid, constrained, one-size-fits-all school and work systems today have an âinterest deficit.â
Purple-Stater Premium Member about 12 years ago
Looks like nobody in the comments section, just like the doctor in the strip, really has a clue how ADD works.
Exception for Phatts California, who wrapped it up, in laymanâs terms, pretty well.