Women and Medicine

Are women ruining Medicine?

i don't know, are they?

yes, it's dumbed down touchy feel bullshit now to cater to women. It's no longer considered a science

>no longer

>it only started being brainlet shit
lol

Im a med student and the course is mostly girls, but they are hugely organized and hard working - even if they stress far too much and will likely burn out. I think they otherwise make good doctors, the problem is how the course reflects the gender make up.

A ridiculous amount of our lectures are no longer about disease, physiology or treatment but are about "health equality", "migrant health" and "how no-one is responsible for their own diseases". A lecturer in first year got a huge amount of complaints because he said girls should keep their hymen, he was iraqi (our uni tries to have as diverse a staff as possible) but even then it was a semi-joke. I would skip all the garbage lectures but they are the specific ones they register you for - you have to turn up for the brainwashing, not so much for the medicine.

What the fuck are you on about

Nevermind I stopped caring because I realized you must be retarded

brainlets are not welcome here

>Being this triggered

All part of the downfall of western civilization.

Everyone knows what the women in their lives are like...

What do people in the medical field even learn? Is it mostly biology or is there some mathematics or chemistry involved? For whatever reason, I never really hear about what goes on in med school.

It's clinically relevant biochem, physiology, and anatomy with histology and embryology. And then pharmacology, pathology, and some joke classes like global health or public health.

Then you learn how to apply this knowledge in the wards. Most of your learning is done on your own here and from reading papers and textbooks on more advanced topics like the principles of certain diagnostics, more advanced path mechs and interrelations, and you can go deeper into math models and research of whatever interests you after the initial info dump the first 2 years.

Most of medicine is self-taught through experience and theoretical interactions you make in your head. Med school though is a joke if you're hard working and disciplined.

And by medicine I mean postmed school

>Med school though is a joke if you're hard working and disciplined.

I have lost count of how many medical students and medical school faculty have stated that medical school is the hardest thing you will have done in your life. Yet you're saying that if you're hard working and dedicated it's easy? Can you expand on this in any way? I'm highly interested in your experience.

As important as men in medicine are. Think of the patients - female patient may find themselves uncomfortable consulting with a male doctor and vice versa

From my experience to do well in medical school you just need to be on yop of things. It's a great deal of information but not too conceptually difficult at least for me. But you can dive much deeper after med school to get into more theoretical abstractions about clinical practice, therapeutics, diagnostics, and models of disease.

Then it becomes a fun game in your head of making patterns between everything to soet of predict what will happen in a patient if X, Y, Z.

Also premeds, med students, and physicians are notorious for overexaggerating in their complaints.

Are we worse at medicine now than we were before women got significantly involved? I was under the impression that medical treatment has improved since the 70s. Not saying this is because of women, but they don't seem to have caused medicine to backslide either.

When I studied medicine it was shifting from heavy anatomy to an 'evidence-based approach'.

pffttt. Who needs evidence in a fucking science course?

Concepts are super easy. Just lots of information. Stay on top of the information and organise both notes and thoughts and it's manageable.

They are notorious for high rates of mental health issues which carry over to when they are Drs.

Women overwhelming stick to therapy and nurisng positions. So no, not really.
They're still hyper-entitled bitchy cunts because DON'T FUCK WITH NURSES WE RUN THE SHOW XDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD
But nah actual medicine is safe

Except most medical students are women.

not if they're hot

>are women ruining ___
Yes

There is absolutely 0 mathematics in medicine. That's why women flock to it.

Not that user but the thing is it's a shit tone of information, if I don't study 4 or 5 hours a day from Monday to Sunday I get behind in classes and when I have an exam 8 or 9 hours a day are not rare.

what about tais method

Unironically yes.

You can use pretty advanced math models in studying the dynamics od pathogenesis or drug action but that's more research stuff.

Most math in clinical med is calculating electrolyte and acid base balances, dosages, and cardiac vals but those are all simple mental math if you understand the concepts behind the equations

>they are hugely organized and hard working - even if they stress far too much and will likely burn out. I think they otherwise make good doctors
1) They have cognitive limits far below those of men, particularly when it comes to developing encyclopedic knowledge of a subject and understanding mechanical relationships. Look at IQ score distributions: the higher you go, the rarer women get. If a comparable number of women to men, let alone a majority, are being trained for elite mental work, you know resources are being severely misallocated.
2) Shortly after they finish their training, they're likely to take years off of work to have children, during which time they'll gain no additional experience and forget half of what they learned, and if they don't, they're likely to become neurotic and unhinged.

With the shortages of doctors, it's an absolute fucking crime to fill the limited training slots with women.

Most drop-outs are women too.
Hmmm...

You're not wrong, stupid things like this just exemplify the dying throes of Western civilization.

We're living in the last days of Rome, you don't get things like this in South Korea and Japan I'll tell you that much.