Guest guest Posted February 21, 2006 Report Share Posted February 21, 2006 I watch out for many of " those " MD's. Unfortunately, many of them are not good doctors. The only such MD in my county, Jan Radzik, is not a great doctor, at all. Besides my practice, I work at the nearest hospital as a Telemetry Technician. It is pretty bad when nurses are worried when he is the patient's doctor. Fortunately, since the hospitalist program began, I have rarely seen him in house. He has an ego that does not quit, and he really cannot stand our kind. He will also talk patient's ears off as to how much better he is than every other doctor. He is one of those European-trained docs who likes medicine Integrate as long as only the MD's are doing the integraing. Wow, are they all like that, those of you who live in Europe, are they all so egotistical? Dr Radzik said, when a hospital co-worker pointed out what else I do for a living, was rude. He suddenly turned, just slightly, and leaned in toward her. He was clearly no longer speaking to both of us. " My one concern about acupuncturist is, are they using clean needles? " I just smiled to myself, and thought, You just showed your true colors, didn't you? The first such doc I knew was Norman Zucker in Federal Way, Washington. He actually had his license revoked while I and my partner were his patients. Fortunately, I can read b/w lines very well, and when his brochure stated that he no longer practiced hospital medicine b/c it did not fit in with his philosophy, I thought, right, they just won't let you. I was right, not b/c he was not nice, not b/c he seemed like a bad guy, I just read b/w the lines. He could not even reapply for Washington license for ten years. I actually obtained copies of the Revocation Notice and the Statement of Charges. The charges included abandonment of hospital patients. It is not legal or ethical to leave for the weekend and not sign out to another doctor in your call group. He has not been licensed in Washington since 1990, I just checked that board's site. Close to where I am now, just last year, an MD who advertises as the doctor who listens, Fred Mitchell, was disciplined and has to have practice superivision for, I believe, five years. He was prescribing massive doses of aceteminophen, and the Board also limited the amt the doses of Tylenol that he may prescribe. I have an MD internist. When I broach whether or not or not he would be willing to sign next year so that I could get say, Tararaxacum leaf standardized extract, reimbursed from my healthcare account, I know that he will frown, or have some such reaction. Hmm, I have no Flex Healthcare account this year, maybe if I start this soon, he would sign for next year if it was working well. See, since I am already on strong diuretic therapy, even transitioning so that I am take part pharmaceutical-part botanical will require extra labs taken and medical supervision. Hmm, maybe I should broach this when I go in next month... My bottom line is, I would rather have a good MD/DO than a doc with holistic leanings, any day. I want him/her to be good at what they do. Often, people have to pick good MD or holistic MD. In altmed schools and companies, there seems to be habit of using unlicensed MD's for consulting and teaching. I do not know why this is so, but when a doc has a non-renewed or surrendered license, it means bad things. I have on my agenda to write for a copy of the surrender notice for one such MD being used in such a capacity right now. There are probably folks reading this who have taken classes from him, in fact. Btw, I would not usually quote names, as I have above, except in the last case. However, I believe in letting folks know about dangerous doc's, especially when they are popular in holistic circles. Also to be fair to my good doc, not at all a dangerous sort, his name is Craig Thornton. One very important point - he trusts his patient's perceptions highly. This is so important to good medicine of any brand. I saw him once when my old doc was out of the office, and this is a key reason I returned to him when she moved out of town. Lynn --- Anne Crowley <blazing.valley wrote: > I agreee with Zev's comments completely. We will lose if we are in competition with WM. WM has a place, emergeny care. My first window of healing is alternative care, and I will even go to an MD that leans this way (however most are no where near my house)... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 21, 2006 Report Share Posted February 21, 2006 Dear Lynn, I'm afraid this post goes against the rules of the group. We had a poll last year about what should and what should not be discussed on this forum and speaking badly about WM was not voted against. See the poll section of the group for more info. Warm regards, Attilio D'Alberto Doctor of (Beijing, China) B.Sc. (Hons) T.C.M. M.A.T.C.M. Editor Times 07786 198900 enquiries <http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com/> www.chinesemedicinetimes.com Chinese Medicine Chinese Medicine On Behalf Of J. Lynn Detamore 21 February 2006 05:18 Chinese Medicine Re:TCM- Asian Med popularity / holistic MD's vs. good MD's I watch out for many of " those " MD's. Unfortunately, many of them are not good doctors. The only such MD in my county, Jan Radzik, is not a great doctor, at all. Besides my practice, I work at the nearest hospital as a Telemetry Technician. It is pretty bad when nurses are worried when he is the patient's doctor. Fortunately, since the hospitalist program began, I have rarely seen him in house. He has an ego that does not quit, and he really cannot stand our kind. He will also talk patient's ears off as to how much better he is than every other doctor. He is one of those European-trained docs who likes medicine Integrate as long as only the MD's are doing the integraing. Wow, are they all like that, those of you who live in Europe, are they all so egotistical? Dr Radzik said, when a hospital co-worker pointed out what else I do for a living, was rude. He suddenly turned, just slightly, and leaned in toward her. He was clearly no longer speaking to both of us. " My one concern about acupuncturist is, are they using clean needles? " I just smiled to myself, and thought, You just showed your true colors, didn't you? The first such doc I knew was Norman Zucker in Federal Way, Washington. He actually had his license revoked while I and my partner were his patients. Fortunately, I can read b/w lines very well, and when his brochure stated that he no longer practiced hospital medicine b/c it did not fit in with his philosophy, I thought, right, they just won't let you. I was right, not b/c he was not nice, not b/c he seemed like a bad guy, I just read b/w the lines. He could not even reapply for Washington license for ten years. I actually obtained copies of the Revocation Notice and the Statement of Charges. The charges included abandonment of hospital patients. It is not legal or ethical to leave for the weekend and not sign out to another doctor in your call group. He has not been licensed in Washington since 1990, I just checked that board's site. Close to where I am now, just last year, an MD who advertises as the doctor who listens, Fred Mitchell, was disciplined and has to have practice superivision for, I believe, five years. He was prescribing massive doses of aceteminophen, and the Board also limited the amt the doses of Tylenol that he may prescribe. I have an MD internist. When I broach whether or not or not he would be willing to sign next year so that I could get say, Tararaxacum leaf standardized extract, reimbursed from my healthcare account, I know that he will frown, or have some such reaction. Hmm, I have no Flex Healthcare account this year, maybe if I start this soon, he would sign for next year if it was working well. See, since I am already on strong diuretic therapy, even transitioning so that I am take part pharmaceutical-part botanical will require extra labs taken and medical supervision. Hmm, maybe I should broach this when I go in next month... My bottom line is, I would rather have a good MD/DO than a doc with holistic leanings, any day. I want him/her to be good at what they do. Often, people have to pick good MD or holistic MD. In altmed schools and companies, there seems to be habit of using unlicensed MD's for consulting and teaching. I do not know why this is so, but when a doc has a non-renewed or surrendered license, it means bad things. I have on my agenda to write for a copy of the surrender notice for one such MD being used in such a capacity right now. There are probably folks reading this who have taken classes from him, in fact. Btw, I would not usually quote names, as I have above, except in the last case. However, I believe in letting folks know about dangerous doc's, especially when they are popular in holistic circles. Also to be fair to my good doc, not at all a dangerous sort, his name is Craig Thornton. One very important point - he trusts his patient's perceptions highly. This is so important to good medicine of any brand. I saw him once when my old doc was out of the office, and this is a key reason I returned to him when she moved out of town. Lynn --- Anne Crowley <blazing.valley wrote: > I agreee with Zev's comments completely. We will lose if we are in competition with WM. WM has a place, emergeny care. My first window of healing is alternative care, and I will even go to an MD that leans this way (however most are no where near my house)... Subscribe to the new FREE online journal for TCM at Times http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com Download the all new TCM Forum Toolbar, click, http://toolbar.thebizplace.com/LandingPage.aspx/CT145145 and adjust accordingly. Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely necessary. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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