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Doonesbury by Garry Trudeau for June 08, 2013
Transcript:
Toggle: Oh... no! Alex... in... in labor! Kim: What: Toggle: "Eli and... D-Danny on... way!" Mike: Oh, my God... Toggle: Where is... is she? Mike: I can't tell! It's just a swarm of PhDs! Woman: She needs a real doctor! Man: Is there a real doctor here? Any real doctor?
BE THIS GUY almost 12 years ago
What good are your fancy PhDs, now?
Linguist almost 12 years ago
Weâve been asking that question all week. Is there a real doctor in the house ?
MikeM27 almost 12 years ago
Many years ago, when I was a graduate student, my mother asked me when I expected to receive my doctorate. I told her it would probably take another two or three years. âMy god,â she replied, âfor spending all that time you could be a real doctor!â
Jogger2 almost 12 years ago
Try âphysicianâ or âmedical doctor.â
vwdualnomand almost 12 years ago
Alex is more than likely a DES. anyone here a PhD, MD, EdD, DDS, Ed. D, DPA. DVM, DNP, JD, Psy. D, DBA, etc..? how long did that take? and, how long did you pay off your student loans?
Dtroutma almost 12 years ago
Twins are a little âtrickierâ, but it is amazing folks forget how long women had babies without doctors. Note the increase in C-sections to REDUCE malpractice suits.
Helped deliver both of my kids, and delivered several others in âemergencyâ situations. Must admit that helping a woman with a broken arm, still stuck in a wrecked car, WAS more than a tad interesting. Both mother and daughter were just fine. (BTW, Iâm waiting for a TV show or movie to stick around and show the delivery of the placenta, and checking to make sure itâs intact, or all there if in pieces, and all the other âneat stuffâ that goes along with the delivery, and cleanup!)
TheSkulker almost 12 years ago
This will be a memorable graduation for everyone â speaker included.
frogsandravens almost 12 years ago
Um, not to ruin the dramatic moment, but labor usually doesnât go that quickly, especially for first-time mothers. She should have enough time to get to the hospital if they leave now.
sleepymom almost 12 years ago
Phd for me. Seven years, including masters, no loans. Got a full ride to Emory university
ComicDetectiveDA almost 12 years ago
Uh-oh. Folks, I see where this is going:
1. The birth of a child (or, in this case, two)âŠ2. Another very, very, very long authorâs sabbaticalâŠ3. A 20-year time skip, a la Funky Winkerbean! I knew this would happen someday!
Clearly, this isnât the best time in the world to be a month-old âDoones-bopperââŠ1996 probably was not the best year to be born, either.
I canât stand it!! (Weeping)
Of course, this is just a theory. Sorry, people. I know you all must think Iâve got a screw loose somewhere, but Iâm also trying to keep everyone from arguing over politics or things that bear little to zero relevance to the dayâs stripâŠ
Welp, enough of that. Off to bed!
pelican47 almost 12 years ago
RSR, thank you for that. Some PhDs donât expect the title Doctor except in professional settings, but they earned it.
Doughfoot almost 12 years ago
Iâve heard a variation on Tucciâs tale. In this case it was a mother boasting that her son was was doctor âbut not the kind that helps people.â Which I think is a better way to make the joke than the somewhat nastier ânot the kind that does anyone any good.â
There are certainly a lot of non-medical doctors that do a lot of people a lot of good, such as designing all the computers that all of us are using to make our comments on.
loves raising duncan almost 12 years ago
Carry he diploma to her!
Richard Howland-Bolton Premium Member almost 12 years ago
Adrian, look up the death rates for mothers and newborns in the 1600sâŠ
mr.monkeyshines almost 12 years ago
dr. hackles..heeâŠyouâre right..if a person says they have a 6 figure salary,thatâs not enough..is it $800,000âŠis it $125,000?..thereâs a lot of misrepresentation here..bordering on fraud,iâd sayâŠ
mr.monkeyshines almost 12 years ago
i think dr.kildare must have been better than dr.casey..just a hunch.
damoge almost 12 years ago
some schools insist on a thesis as well as all other criteria before issuing an M.D. That makes those doctors real doctors by any definition, Old1953âŠ.
RetiredNotDead almost 12 years ago
To the tune of Mickey Mouse Club song, âM I T, P H D, M o n e yââŠ..Class of â67.
annieb1012 almost 12 years ago
Re: wordsâŠ.*
It sometimes seems that in our society, pretty much anything medical is considered more ârealâ than anything nonmedical.
*
In the King James Bible, the senior theologians in the temple (who listened carefully to the the twelve-year-old Jesus) are called âdoctors.â
*
âTheoryâ means two almost opposite things in different contexts. Hereâs a bit from Wikipedia:
âWhen used in non-scientific context, the word âtheoryâ implies that something is unproven or speculative. As used in science, however, a theory is an explanation or model based on observation, experimentation, and reasoning, especially one that has been tested and confirmed as a general principle helping to explain and predict natural phenomena.â
In my experience, when someone says, in casual conversation, âOf course, this is just a theoryâ or âMy theory isâŠâ the speaker is positing a hypothesis, an assumption, a speculation, or a guess.
annieb1012 almost 12 years ago
My every attempt to figure out how not to post more than once has failed. Help, somebody?!
Squoop almost 12 years ago
Why donât they just call an ambulance? Even if it canât get her to the hospital in time, it can certainly get to her in time, and my guess is that they are trained and equipped to deal with this â assuming it is a normal birth other than the twin factor.
rbzlaw Premium Member almost 12 years ago
There are a lot of us Doctors of Juris out there but no one calls us âdoctor.â
thesnowleopard Premium Member almost 12 years ago
Good to know. I think Iâve managed to delete all the duplicates.
montessoriteacher almost 12 years ago
Yes, you have to be careful how you use the refresh button. Even go so far as to sign out and get back on before hitting refresh if you just posted a comment, otherwise, it gets posted again. And again. When you want to submit, just press submit, not refresh.
annieb1012 almost 12 years ago
annieb1012 said, less than a minute ago@Red Repoc** Thanks! My problem now is that my browser (Safari) isnât offering me a ârefreshâ option. For a while, Iâd submit my post, refrain from hitting âRefresh Comments,â go to another strip for a bit, and then find my post properly placed when I returned here. Last night, though, I did that with another strip, and my post never appeared. Sigh.
montessoriteacher almost 12 years ago
Quite honestly, I have both MDs and PhDs in my family and I donât see any animus between the two groups.
annieb1012 almost 12 years ago
I just posted by hitting âSubmit,â hopping over to âFrazz,â and returning here without hitting âRefresh Comments.â Worked fine. Maybe last nightâs problem was an anomaly.
montessoriteacher almost 12 years ago
I know my husband would not be thrilled to be called upon to deliver a baby, as an orthopaedic surgeon. We have a friend who had to help deliver a baby on a plane and he was an opthamalogist. He had not had to deliver a baby since med school, which was a long, long time ago. Still, he was better at it than most of the population, though not his cup of tea.
annieb1012 almost 12 years ago
@jbzlaw ** More on word history: Wikipedia has this, amid much more, on the JD degree:
âThe degree was first awarded by Harvard University in the United States in the late 19th century and was created as a modern version of the old European doctor of law degree (such as the Dottore in Giurisprudenza in Italy and the Juris Utriusque Doctor in Germany and Central Europe).12 Originating from the 19th century Harvard movement for the scientific study of law, it is a law degree that in most common law jurisdictions is the primary professional preparation for lawyers. "
annieb1012 almost 12 years ago
It seems the word âdoctorâ originally meant âteacher,â particularly an oral teacher, as contrasted with a âscribe,â who would lay down precepts in writing.
unca jim almost 12 years ago
Three foota snow and an elderly midwife got me here 78 years ago, and Iâm good with that.
annieb1012 almost 12 years ago
@montessoriteacher âI have both MDs and PhDs in my family and I donât see any animus between the two groups.â*
Thank you for that. Iâve never encountered it, either, except here, and frankly donât get it.
susan.e.a.c almost 12 years ago
Where I live they did lots of c-sections, but then they changed the schedule so docs got less money for doing a c-section than a live birth and all of a sudden c-sections became rare.
Cozmik Cowboy almost 12 years ago
A PhD requires original research; MD requires more memorization, and is, academically speaking, equal to a second BS. Renaissance physicians invented MD to coat-tail on the respect PhDs had for several centuries previous, in order to seperate themselves form the barbers they still really were. PhD = real Dr.(Explanation courtesy of Isaac Asimov, PhD)
Kip W almost 12 years ago
How many PdDs does it take to deliver a baby?
Just one, if heâs a cab driver.
Kip W almost 12 years ago
This is no time to mince words! Boil some water and get a jar of leeches while I go search for a chirurgeon!
McSpook almost 12 years ago
âI have witnessed several births from bovines and my wife.â.Geez, man, youâd think your wife would get top billing in that sentence. But youâre right, it is a miracle, of both life and anatomy.
jerechase almost 12 years ago
I usually try to rise above the level of discussion on this board, but I just couldnât let that one pass.Tucci, speaking as someone working very hard to become an âover credentialed idiotâ, I think youâre being mean-spirited about a group of people you have not made much effort to understand.Iâm about three chapters shy of a Ph.D. in history (Itâs taken me 12 years, because Iâm also a full-time high school teacher; I write at night, until I canât stay awake any longer).I happen to believe that understanding where we came from and how we got to where we are is valuable to society, but, honestly, Iâm doing this because I love it, just as most of my engineering friends are. We can debate its value if you like.But to say that getting a Ph.D. in the humanities is easy is just plain untrue. I had to show fluency in three languages before I started, then pass an oral exam in which professors could more or less ask any question they liked about three areas of history, then write a 350-page book subject to intense scrutiny from people with 50 years more experience and convince them that itâs a new, worthwhile, contribution to our understanding of the past.When I finish, I donât expect to go around asking people to call me Dr. outside professional settings, but will I be proud of the right to the title? Heck yeah!If the end result isnât something youâre interested in, fine. But donât say it was easy if you havenât tried it.Okay. Now Iâll step down off my soapbox again.
Dtroutma almost 12 years ago
Two points:
1. Iâve had the site do multiple postings with jus a single âsubmitâ in the last week or so. When trying to highlight ONE and delete the âextrasâ, all the copies disappeared, must be a glitch at GC server?
2. My comment on C sections WAS in reference to the fact that the lethality of childbirth, and infant âcomplicationsâ IS on the rise, both mothers and infants are dying at an INCREASING RATE in the U.S.. And, yes, I do know the history of how lethal childbirth has been over the millennia, but our modern âlifestyleâ here in the U.S. seems to be part of that infant mortality increase.
Also, itâs interesting that âpro-lifeâ folks seem convinced that EVERY fertilization results in a happy, healthy, momma and infant. This is NOT the case at all, and the reason for a better sanity argument for those in the âpro-choiceâ camp.
It IS also interesting how large an object can pass through what is normally so small a passage. (Genetically small pelvis is also increasing, and THAT IS a problem that leads to C sections, as skeletal structures donât expand as well as muscle tissues!)
Which on the âbovineâ comment, many cattle today with inbreeding, are dependent upon a chain and pickup truck being a âdelivery toolâ! Which is also why many cattle left out on open range to deliver are dying, and that leads to blaming coyotes or other predators/scavengers being blamed for the deaths.
We are becoming the nation of âunintended consequencesâ.
amaryllis2 Premium Member almost 12 years ago
I always found the best way to get a baby to come is to be absolutely committed to doing something else that day.
marge201 almost 12 years ago
This is a riot and, um, yeah yeah yeah about first-time mothers. Itâs a comic strip. Itâs funny. Just enjoy, um.
Hawthorne almost 12 years ago
âWhat we need are "low-cost " specialists, a 21st century version of a mid-wifeâŠDid I mention the need for reform/improvement in the medical profession. ??."
You beat me to it.
According to a nursing text published sometimes in the sixties, if I remember correctly, fully 95% of births proceed unremarkably and successfully.
I would add that an experienced midwife can deal successfully with another 2 or 3% of those births, which leaves only a few parturitions which actually require draconian intervention.
But modern medicine treats femininity as a disease from puberty on. My health has been ruined, because when I developed obstructive sleep apnea in the 90s, I was treated for being âfemaleâ. Not only did I not get the treatment I needed for the OSA, but the HRT pushed me into breast cancer.
That doesnât take into consideration the way my daughterâs birth was handled, either.
I agree that reforms are needed.
Michelle Morris almost 12 years ago
SoooâŠitâs okay to slam a personâs âsoftâ science degree,despite the work theyâve put into it?
Hawthorne almost 12 years ago
" But then they supplanted Mid Wives."
Thatâs what they did. Before that, even in âcivilizedâ places, so called (cities), women had little to fear from childbirth. Women didnât die more often in childbirth than livestock did, say.
Doctors had to get rid of midwives, because it was so obvious that midwivesâ patients were safer. They slandered and libeled them unmercifully, until only the destitute and country women would go to them, in spite of the crystal clear evidence they were better off in the hands of midwives. Of course, as doctors prevailed, midwives became not only fewer, but less skilled, too. By the turn of this century, a few midwives were still around, but they were pretty much rare avis. I donât know much about todayâs midwives, but I think they are trained by conventional medicine. Even so, I would prefer one, given a free choice.
Things are no better now. Not really â if you consider that this is the 21st century, we have sterile environments for procedures and services, we certainly have very much more knowledge than existed even 150 years ago â but we are still losing women to childbirth. The US statistics put us well behind other First World countries, as well as a couple of Third world countries.
The trouble is itâs not only childbirth. Medical services for women are terrible in general. Women, absent bones sticking out or fountains of arterial blood, are treated mostly for being female. Unless your condition is patently obvious, if you are a woman you will be treated for inadequate hormones (notice the breast cancer rate still soaring?), or for âhysteriaâ; women are still considered to have only one (1) organ, and of course, no intellect.
Yes, this has been very much my personal experience, but also of a good many other women Iâve known. The thing is, women have been treated this way by doctors for so long, they think they are being treated well. Some are treated adequately, but most have problems.
One of my friends is over seventy, and went to her new internist (my husbandâs referral; he says he hears what you tell him), with her 20 prescriptions and a box full of physician recommended supplements. Thatâs his policy; new patient? Shovel all your medications in a box and bring it. He told her to dump all the OTC (but let her keep the ones she felt were useful: 2), and said heâd see her after heâd talked to her other doctors. Her other doctors are wholly disinterested in reducing her prescription burden; sheâs been trying to do it for over twenty years, so sheâs delighted.
Sheâs not unusual in my experience, just a little more extreme than most. I know what my brothers and other friends are taking, and they are nuts, but itâs not my body.
In a way, Iâm very lucky. My system is so intolerant of chemical drugs that years ago my policy became: take no drug that makes you feel worse than the condition you are taking it for. Doctors donât like me much, and mostly I donât like them; the good ones are hard to find. This one seems like a good candidate, so Iâm going to give him a shot when I qualify for Medicare in the fall. I suspected that he might be a good candidate when I sent my husband to him last fall. He is not an American born/trained doctor.
And isnât that a dreadful thing to say? I hope it will soften it a little for me to say I have had two truly exceptional, caring, thinking doctors over the fifty years of my adulthood; three if you count my truly excellent oncologist. However, itâs a near certain fact that I wouldnât need the oncologist, had the previous several doctors not mis diagnosed me, mis-medicated me, and in general mistreated me.
And that says nothing about the birth of my daughter, which I wonât inflict upon you :-)
Hawthorne almost 12 years ago
Rallies are ârealityâ ..?
Give. Me. A. Break.
rotflolastc1
Michelle Morris almost 12 years ago
And your degree is in�
Bluesierra almost 12 years ago
I read once that Oscar Wildeâs father was a doctor. The joke around town then was, âWhy are his fingernails always dirty?â and the answer was âBecause he scratches himself.â But I digress. This is a COMIC STRIP. Why always the philosophical discussions? Cheez.
annieb1012 almost 12 years ago
@Gokie âa male name for my first name that sounded like my intended name.â Good grief! Did the first name ever get changed to the intended version?!
*
Thanks for the tips on duplicates. Every time Iâve tried to delete one, both have disappeared, so Iâve done what youâve suggested, and copied the post first so as not to have to reconstruct it. It now seems easiest just to âSubmitâ but not âRefresh Comments,â trusting âthe systemâ to put things to rights. (Whatever the system may beâŠ.)
Gokie5 almost 12 years ago
So when I needed a passport thirty-some-odd years later, I needed a birth certificate â mine had gone missing. Wrote to Atlanta, but didnât get one (time was getting of the essence), so wrote my home town, and got the âpart maleâ certificate. Mom and I had to go to our county courthouse, so she could swear that the certificate referred to me (sheâd had my name put right when I was three). Could go on and on, but Iâll shut up.
annieb1012 almost 12 years ago
Just recalled a poignant story illustrating one logical extreme of the assumption that only âreal doctorsâ should deliver babies. Our next-door neighbor had been an Army nurse at Normandy, and had married an officer she cared for there. When it came time for their first child to be born, and she went to the hospital, the doctor couldnât be found. The nurses on duty, convinced that they were not âauthorizedâ to allow the birth to proceed, held the motherâs legs firmly together so the baby could not emerge. By the time the doctor arrived, the baby had died. The couple did go on to have four more children, but they would have liked to keep that first one, too. And that former Army nurse could have delivered the baby all by herself if the other nurses had simply stood back and let her.
Michelle Morris almost 12 years ago
Well,Iâm not blessed with a degree of any sort,so you donât have to get all defensive. I just have great respect for anyone who works hard for graduate/post-graduate/doctoral work,regardless of the major. Iâm just noticing a pattern of professional disdain of âhardâ scientists toward the âsquishyâ scientists,which I think is unfortunate and petty,and undermines science as a whole.
annieb1012 almost 12 years ago
@Blackwolff9 âunfortunate and pettyâ Hear, hear! Disdain for othersâ accomplishments is egocentric and narrow-minded. Every discipline has its value in the grand scheme of civilization â a word which includes the word âcivil.â
annieb1012 almost 12 years ago
And itâs not just the âsquishyâ sciences being dissed here, but pretty much anything outside Western medicine, particularly if it has no obvious âmarket value.â
David Huie Green LikeNobody'sEverSeen almost 12 years ago
Repetitive, too
David Huie Green LikeNobody'sEverSeen almost 12 years ago
They do much good but often not medical good.
Please note the new PhD also requesting a âreal doctor.âFunny..Please also note the names of the twins seems settled.
David Huie Green LikeNobody'sEverSeen almost 12 years ago
Radical idea here: Maybe you could call a medical doctor an MD or even a physician (as in âPhysician, heal thyself.â)
Newshound41 almost 12 years ago
Havenât seen John Pike today. As a grandfather, he probably feels for what Mike is going through now.
Moley almost 12 years ago
David Huie Green LikeNobody'sEverSeen almost 12 years ago
In general hard sciences are those which can be tested, soft or squishy âsciencesâ usually can not be tested rigorously. Those who favor one tend to question the other or resent it. Modern physics is in danger of going soft unless they can devise proper experiments.
annieb1012 almost 12 years ago
@DavidHuieGreen * Sorry, no comprendo. Not sure what I said that youâre responding to.
di0genes almost 12 years ago
I think this is the ULTIMATE graduation gift.
daedalusomega almost 12 years ago
Since when âpedanticâ is a synonym of âridiculousâ?
Dr Lou Premium Member almost 12 years ago
A PhD is a REAL doctor while one with an MD is a physician.
maree pavletich almost 12 years ago
Showtime! Whereâs Zonker?
loves raising duncan almost 12 years ago
Is this one of the cliff hangers?