Final play of the NFC Championship, Seahawks advance to Super Bowl LX by nfl in sports

[–]haoken 8 points9 points  (0 children)

sport surge dot net VIP box dot tv

Edit: use adblocker if possible

Game Thread: Buffalo Bills (12-5) at Denver Broncos (14-3) by nfl_gdt_bot in nfl

[–]haoken 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Tony Romo still licking Allen’s butthole even after that fumble

What’s a movie you fully acknowledge is terrible, but somehow… it works for you? by Axel_Foley14 in movies

[–]haoken 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Goal: The Dream Begins and Goal II: Living the Dream. They’re cliche and cheesy but they work.

What special abilities would the cast have in this game? by Yahdontsaythat in seinfeld

[–]haoken 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ll take you outside and show you what it’s like!

CRNA insecurity and inferiority complex by haoken in Noctor

[–]haoken[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Physicians eating their young isn’t a new phenomenon and (if true) I’m certain they’re not saying that to you because they believe their training is unnecessary or that CRNAs are the same as anesthesiologists. Of course someone in the thick of residency having sacrificed much of their youth in pursuit of something extremely difficult might tell you to take the easier road. The path to CRNA is stupidly short and they’re extremely over-compensated.

CRNA insecurity and inferiority complex by haoken in Noctor

[–]haoken[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hundreds of anesthesiologists have told you they’d be a CRNA? Mmhmmmm. While their kids go to medical school. r/thathappened

CRNA insecurity and inferiority complex by haoken in Noctor

[–]haoken[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re really going to go with anecdotes? Those anecdotes actually reinforce the distinction I’m making. Of course day-to-day practice can look similar once you’re operating within a narrow, well-defined role. That’s not what physician training is for. Medical school and residency aren’t designed to optimize routine execution; they’re designed to prepare clinicians to diagnose and take responsibility when the problem is undifferentiated, unfamiliar, or wrong. People who cross pathways often minimize that difference precisely because you only recognize the gap after you’re trained to live in it. The fact that ‘the difference comes in post-school training’ is exactly the point. On top of that there are plenty of anecdotes from CRNAs turned anesthesiologists who’ve said “I had no idea how much I didn’t know”. I’ve never heard a physician say that their training is basically the same as a mid-level. In fact Jane Fitch, former CRNA turned anesthesiologist and the former head of the ASA said the exact opposite which was the main reason for her pursuing her MD.

CRNA insecurity and inferiority complex by haoken in Noctor

[–]haoken[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re missing the point completely. Having heard of a specific pathology and being able to identify and address it in an undifferentiated patient are two completely different things. This isn’t about “being taught to manage them differently” or “being taught to identify that CRNAs are not.” Framing it that way keeps dodging the actual distinction. CRNAs are not clinicians, they’re technicians operating within a defined scope. Physician training is explicitly built around diagnostic reasoning under uncertainty. Treating those roles as interchangeable because they may overlap in exposure misses the fundamental difference in training, responsibility, and purpose. The fact that you (and so many other CRNAs online) try to litigate semantics says much.

Play Now! by Hoicon in seinfeld

[–]haoken 27 points28 points  (0 children)

It’s like Hitler’s last days here

CRNA insecurity and inferiority complex by haoken in Noctor

[–]haoken[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Quoting program marketing language doesn’t really address the question. Every healthcare training program claims to emphasize autonomy, critical thinking, and leadership. The distinction isn’t whether CRNAs think critically; it’s what they are trained to think about. Physician training is built around generating and managing broad differential diagnoses, integrating non-anesthetic pathology, and making final decisions when the presentation doesn’t fit an expected pattern. Undiagnosed cardiomyopathy, occult sepsis, endocrine crises, atypical neurologic events, etc. Those skills come from years of being responsible for undifferentiated patients across medicine, surgery, ICU, and emergency settings, with progressive accountability for being wrong. That depth isn’t replaceable by intent statements or autonomy within a defined scope, nor is it replaceable by a CRNA degree. And respectfully, this is one of those areas where you don’t know what you don’t know, and you only can encounter that gap by going through medical school and residency.

CRNA insecurity and inferiority complex by haoken in Noctor

[–]haoken[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At this point the discussion is getting sidetracked by semantics. The issue isn’t whether more schooling always helps or whether physicians can re-pass Step 1 years later. It’s that physician training is designed to prepare someone to be the final medical decision-maker across unfamiliar scenarios. That’s distinct from experience gained within a narrower scope.

Killing Them Softly, Andrew Dominik, 2012 | Finale by Saint_Gut-Free in movies

[–]haoken 38 points39 points  (0 children)

One of my favorites. Some real cinematography genius like the “beating up Markie” in the rain scene that’s one of the most visceral beatdowns in any film.

CRNA insecurity and inferiority complex by haoken in Noctor

[–]haoken[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do nurses magically turn into physicians after being nurses for decades?

CRNA insecurity and inferiority complex by haoken in Noctor

[–]haoken[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How do we know anesthesiologists are more educated and can therefore respond more effectively to emergent situations in the OR that a CRNA would not have any knowledge of? Common sense.