I love reading cancer cases and the differences between what a doctor chooses to do when they are the patient.
In essence: A doctor will nearly always opt for a qualitative outcome and choose a very short life lived in quality with virtually no treatment. A patient will nearly always opt for a quantitative outcome based on longevity of life at a much reduced living standard.
Ultimately the conversations between a doctor and a cancer patient are founded on lies to make a patient feel better.
I found 50/13 on here to be very noble and wise in his short struggle, I really respected him for having the foresight to see through the fear at the reality and deal with things.
Technology isn't really going to help solve the messy psychological stuff people introduce. But then I, and no-one else, ever said it would.
That's usually politics.
I love reading cancer cases and the differences between what a doctor chooses to do when they are the patient.
In essence: A doctor will nearly always opt for a qualitative outcome and choose a very short life lived in quality with virtually no treatment. A patient will nearly always opt for a quantitative outcome based on longevity of life at a much reduced living standard.
Ultimately the conversations between a doctor and a cancer patient are founded on lies to make a patient feel better.
I found 50/13 on here to be very noble and wise in his short struggle, I really respected him for having the foresight to see through the fear at the reality and deal with things.
Technology isn't really going to help solve the messy psychological stuff people introduce. But then I, and no-one else, ever said it would.