
soft sweep
2.7K posts

soft sweep
@softsweep
Genetically engineered rent-seeking missile



Can a big brave doctor explain to silly little me how "my head hurts" can distinguish a migraine from a brain tumour?

@Bonecondor I married a woman with the last name Dick


Doctors should be paid based on the health of their patients. Things would look a lot different.


I guess if you're getting ticks all the time and don't check then it can be an issue. Most cases I've dealt with are like, "my kid went out in the woods and I found a tick on him when he came home, then we removed it. Does he need doxy?" Which, probably not. If a parent pushed then I reviewed risks of doxy and am generally happy to prescribe. Yeah the timelines are arbitrary, but they're probably conservative given low lyme risk within several days of bite.



Drs have such weird control issues that you literally have to go into every apptmnt acting like you’ve never heard of the concept of medication. I’m not just talking opioids or benzos. I mean even if you want migraine meds for a migraine you have to let them come up w the idea




Drs have such weird control issues that you literally have to go into every apptmnt acting like you’ve never heard of the concept of medication. I’m not just talking opioids or benzos. I mean even if you want migraine meds for a migraine you have to let them come up w the idea





A 26-year-old dental student in Connecticut died in an intensive care unit that was overseen by a remote "tele-health" doctor who pronounced him dead on a video screen after failing to "effectively communicate" his medical needs, a lawsuit says. Conor Hylton's parents are... 1/2

Plenty of corrections are needed here: Yes, getting into U.S. medical schools is difficult, but that’s true globally. Medicine is one of the most competitive fields everywhere, not just in the U.S. Also, your stats are off. Average accepted GPA is around 3.7–3.8 and MCAT around 510–512, not 4.0 and 528. Medical School Acceptance rates tell a more important story: • U.S.: ~40–43% • U.K.: ~30–32% • India: ~5% • Pakistan: ~10–15% So no, the U.S. is not uniquely restrictive. Now let’s talk about residency, where the real misunderstanding is. In 2026: • Total residency positions: ~44,000 • Total U.S. MD + DO applicants: ~29,000 That leaves a gap of ~14,000 positions even if every single U.S. graduate matched, which most do, especially after SOAP. So the real question is: 👉 Who fills those 14,000 positions? These are not “extra luxury spots.” They are in rural America, underserved communities, and even community hospitals in major cities like NYC, Chicago, Philadelphia, Houston, Atlanta. Without IMGs, those positions remain unfilled, and patients go without care. Yes, Medicare funds residency. That’s exactly why leaving thousands of training spots vacant would make zero sense for the healthcare system. This is not about fairness vs unfairness. This is about workforce reality. Blaming IMGs is not solving the problem, it’s ignoring it. Please don’t spread half-cooked stats that fuel misinformation. #Match2026 #MedTwitter #MedEd




Monthly median Received to Accepted time (days) at Nature Genetics


Let's look at how we compare in physician density to some other countries.


We do this at my office in Miami (The Osteopathic Center). This removed 20% of all the toxins from your body at once, over the course of 3.5 hours. That includes heavy metals, microplastics, PFAS and many more. Seeing the toxins fill up the bag is crazy!


All my friends in my native San Francisco are in a fury over a judge's decision to grant probation to a 24-year-old defendant who had assaulted and killed an 84-year-old man in an unprovoked attack. The judge—Linda Colfax—was appointed to the bench in 2011 and has subsequently run UNOPPOSED in elections. I hope voters remember this case the next time she is running to keep her seat. sfchronicle.com/sf/article/gra…







