Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 1
- Posts: 2362
- Joined: Mon Mar 12, 2012 2:18 am
- Location: Houston
- Contact:
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
I have had medical treatment in Singapore, Thailand, and Nigeria. All were superb. I find that docs here in the US spend far too much energy testing, re-testing, and re-re-testing in order to avoid lawsuits, and the foreign docs I visited overseas focused on diagnosis and then treatment, without wasting too much time.
Your best option for personal security is a lifelong commitment to avoidance, deterrence, and de-escalation.
When those fail, aim for center mass.
www.HoustonLTC.com Texas LTC Instructor | www.Texas3006.com Moderator | Tennessee Squire | Armored Cavalry
When those fail, aim for center mass.
www.HoustonLTC.com Texas LTC Instructor | www.Texas3006.com Moderator | Tennessee Squire | Armored Cavalry
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 3
- Posts: 6096
- Joined: Tue Jun 29, 2010 5:49 pm
- Location: Victoria, Texas
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
Well, the average engineer that I've encountered that was educated in Mexico has been better educated than the average engineer I've encountered in the US...across the board. In cases of high specialization that may not be true but then almost all the Phd engineers I know are foreigners and most of them were educated in the US. Then again I'm dealing with a small sample size so my experience may not be representative.
Also, I have the impression that admission to medical school may play a role in limiting the supply of doctors in order to keep doctors in the money, so it may be more of a quantity than a quality issue. I also think a lot of what doctors do has more to do with keeping supply limited than it has to do with the requirements of good medical care. IOW, RNs and PA's could do a lot of it.
So personally, I am not at all concerned that a doctor is foreign born or foreign educated. Come to think of it, I've run into to plenty of American born and educated doctors that weren't up to snuff, but not any foreign ones.
Also, I have the impression that admission to medical school may play a role in limiting the supply of doctors in order to keep doctors in the money, so it may be more of a quantity than a quality issue. I also think a lot of what doctors do has more to do with keeping supply limited than it has to do with the requirements of good medical care. IOW, RNs and PA's could do a lot of it.
So personally, I am not at all concerned that a doctor is foreign born or foreign educated. Come to think of it, I've run into to plenty of American born and educated doctors that weren't up to snuff, but not any foreign ones.
"Journalism, n. A job for people who flunked out of STEM courses, enjoy making up stories, and have no detectable integrity or morals."
From the WeaponsMan blog, weaponsman.com
From the WeaponsMan blog, weaponsman.com
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 1
- Posts: 1396
- Joined: Mon Jan 24, 2011 12:03 am
- Location: Sugar Land, TX
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
My former PCP was Russian; my current one is caucasian about 75 years old. My former cardiologist was Lebanese; my current one is caucasian and a dwarf. My nephrologist is jewish. They all are excellent for my individual needs from each one. The point should be researching for what they know related to what you need not where do they come from, what is their religion, what race are they, or who is on their bowling team.
They still have to take and pass the American testing standards to be certified no matter where they studied. You still should ask questions and be an active participant in treatment and medicine decisions rather than meekly sitting in the chair. No good doctor will be offended by you showing an interest in your own treatment.
They still have to take and pass the American testing standards to be certified no matter where they studied. You still should ask questions and be an active participant in treatment and medicine decisions rather than meekly sitting in the chair. No good doctor will be offended by you showing an interest in your own treatment.
DPS Received Forms- 1/18/11 Online Status - 1/27/11 My Mailbox - 2/12/11
NRA Life Member
NRA Life Member
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 7
- Posts: 17350
- Joined: Tue Jul 03, 2007 12:53 pm
- Location: Houston
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
I completely agree with this statement. If there were as many medical schools as law schools, heath care costs would be reasonable.VMI77 wrote:Well, the average engineer that I've encountered that was educated in Mexico has been better educated than the average engineer I've encountered in the US...across the board. In cases of high specialization that may not be true but then almost all the Phd engineers I know are foreigners and most of them were educated in the US. Then again I'm dealing with a small sample size so my experience may not be representative.
Also, I have the impression that admission to medical school may play a role in limiting the supply of doctors in order to keep doctors in the money, so it may be more of a quantity than a quality issue. I also think a lot of what doctors do has more to do with keeping supply limited than it has to do with the requirements of good medical care. IOW, RNs and PA's could do a lot of it.
So personally, I am not at all concerned that a doctor is foreign born or foreign educated. Come to think of it, I've run into to plenty of American born and educated doctors that weren't up to snuff, but not any foreign ones.
NRA Endowment Member
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
SLD,
"...rather than meekly sitting in the chair."
Me?
Meek?
Why ya hardly know me...
"...rather than meekly sitting in the chair."
Me?
Meek?
Why ya hardly know me...
-
- Banned
- Posts in topic: 3
- Posts: 2593
- Joined: Mon Jul 28, 2014 5:16 pm
- Location: North Dallas
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
Sorry guys, but your theory about medical schools limiting supply does not hold water. The problem is the insurance companies making a medicine an awful place to work - as physicians who care about patients are penalized for "low productivity" and Obamacare has made that 100X worse. As far as American born medical students, the number is decreasing because a majority of American kids just don't want to work that hard or deprive themselves of material wealth until their 30's. No problem filling physical therapy and forest rangery classes. RN's and PA's have an important role, but they are not able to replace experienced, trained physicians. The RN / PA push is many times simply a method to increase "productivity" and meet the infinite number of moronic metrics propagated by new MBA graduates and "lean six sigma" experts. If you desire the best medical care, and you are able to access it, always try to get to a University affiliated teaching hospital.WildBill wrote:I completely agree with this statement. If there were as many medical schools as law schools, heath care costs would be reasonable.VMI77 wrote:Well, the average engineer that I've encountered that was educated in Mexico has been better educated than the average engineer I've encountered in the US...across the board. In cases of high specialization that may not be true but then almost all the Phd engineers I know are foreigners and most of them were educated in the US. Then again I'm dealing with a small sample size so my experience may not be representative.
Also, I have the impression that admission to medical school may play a role in limiting the supply of doctors in order to keep doctors in the money, so it may be more of a quantity than a quality issue. I also think a lot of what doctors do has more to do with keeping supply limited than it has to do with the requirements of good medical care. IOW, RNs and PA's could do a lot of it.
So personally, I am not at all concerned that a doctor is foreign born or foreign educated. Come to think of it, I've run into to plenty of American born and educated doctors that weren't up to snuff, but not any foreign ones.
Last edited by Bitter Clinger on Mon Feb 01, 2016 11:00 am, edited 1 time in total.
"You may all go to H3ll, and I will go to Texas." - Davy Crockett
"Fast is fine, but accuracy is everything." - Wyatt Earp
NRA Life Member
לעולם לא תשכח
"Fast is fine, but accuracy is everything." - Wyatt Earp
NRA Life Member
לעולם לא תשכח
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 1
- Posts: 9655
- Joined: Tue Aug 12, 2008 9:22 pm
- Location: Allen, Texas
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
To practice as Medical Doctors, all have to be Board Certified in their Specialty. Two of my friends are born and graduated from Syria's Medical Schools. One was number #1 in his class. He came to US and specialized as Pathologist. He became Director of Pathology Division at University of Texas, Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.
The second, has a similar background, and became a prominent Neurologist in Lubbock, TX.
4 of my cousins (3 brothers, 1 sister) all graduated from American University of Beirut (founded in 1866).
1) The elder is a very successful Pulmonologist
2) The second is a well know Vascular Surgeon
3) The third, a well doing pediatritionist
4) The fourth, she is an MD too. She did here fellowship in US , but she moved to Dubai, UAE.
The second, has a similar background, and became a prominent Neurologist in Lubbock, TX.
4 of my cousins (3 brothers, 1 sister) all graduated from American University of Beirut (founded in 1866).
1) The elder is a very successful Pulmonologist
2) The second is a well know Vascular Surgeon
3) The third, a well doing pediatritionist
4) The fourth, she is an MD too. She did here fellowship in US , but she moved to Dubai, UAE.
Last edited by Beiruty on Mon Feb 01, 2016 11:35 am, edited 1 time in total.
Beiruty,
United we stand, dispersed we falter
2014: NRA Endowment lifetime member
United we stand, dispersed we falter
2014: NRA Endowment lifetime member
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
I'm in medical/pharmaceutical sales and I call on Medical professionals daily. It really makes no difference where they're from. One, a primary care doc, in Beaumont/Port Arthur is from Hatti, speaks four languages and still makes house calls on his patients, another, a Cardiologist, is from the middle east and is one of the best I've ever seen both in his specialty and in patient care. My own PCP is American born, who's parents were from India and has a bedside manner with no equal. Prior to that my PCP in East Texas had a large practice and my FFL guy on the side. That being said, there are bad and good from all walks of life, kinda like lawyers. Referrals, Health Grades, WebMD, Health Net and some other are a good resource as places to start. It never hurts to ask for patient referrals went inquiring but may not matter if a doc is outside your network.
The military arsenal we will use to fight a World War IV ..... "stones" - Einstein
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 7
- Posts: 17350
- Joined: Tue Jul 03, 2007 12:53 pm
- Location: Houston
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
I agree that insurance companies are making medicine an awful place to work for doctors, but I still think it's about maintaining high salaries for doctors. Medical schools don't lack for qualified applicants. There are plenty of qualified and highly motivated students who are turned down due to lack of space. The high cost also deters many qualified students.Bitter Clinger wrote:Sorry guys, but your theory about medical schools limiting supply does not hold water. The problem is the insurance companies making a medicine an awful place to work - as physicians who care about patients are penalized for "low productivity" and Obamacare has made that 100X worse. As far as American born medical students, the number is decreasing because a majority of American kids just don't want to work that hard or deprive themselves of material wealth until their 30's. No problem filling physical therapy and forest rangery classes. RN's and PA's have an important role, but they are not able to replace experienced, trained physicians. The RN / PA push is many times simply a method to increase "productivity" and meet the infinite number of moronic metrics propagated by new MBA graduates and "lean six sigma" experts. If you desire the best medical care, and you are able to access it, always try to get to a University affiliated teaching hospital.WildBill wrote:I completely agree with this statement. If there were as many medical schools as law schools, heath care costs would be reasonable.VMI77 wrote:Well, the average engineer that I've encountered that was educated in Mexico has been better educated than the average engineer I've encountered in the US...across the board. In cases of high specialization that may not be true but then almost all the Phd engineers I know are foreigners and most of them were educated in the US. Then again I'm dealing with a small sample size so my experience may not be representative.
Also, I have the impression that admission to medical school may play a role in limiting the supply of doctors in order to keep doctors in the money, so it may be more of a quantity than a quality issue. I also think a lot of what doctors do has more to do with keeping supply limited than it has to do with the requirements of good medical care. IOW, RNs and PA's could do a lot of it.
So personally, I am not at all concerned that a doctor is foreign born or foreign educated. Come to think of it, I've run into to plenty of American born and educated doctors that weren't up to snuff, but not any foreign ones.
NRA Endowment Member
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
Not true. They don't have to be board certified and although I prefer seeing a board certified doctor the requirements for staying board certified are so ridiculous that many are no longer re-certifying and many non-certified specialists are just fine.Beiruty wrote:To practice as Medical Doctors, all have to be Board Certified in their Specialty.
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
Ya'll are correct. Just because someone has a medical degree in another country doesn't mean they can just come on over and hang out a shingle and start taking patients. They gotta go through part of the process here to become certified and licensed. That even happens within the country from state to state. Doctors moving from one state to another must take a board exam to become certified to practice in their new state. Those that can't pass that exam after 3, IIRC, attempts cannot practice in the state. The number and time frame may vary from state to state.
I worked in a nursing department many years ago while I was in school. That's how I picked out my future daughter's pediatrician.
I worked in a nursing department many years ago while I was in school. That's how I picked out my future daughter's pediatrician.
I am not and have never been a LEO. My avatar is in honor of my friend, Dallas Police Sargent Michael Smith, who was murdered along with four other officers in Dallas on 7.7.2016.
NRA Patriot-Endowment Lifetime Member---------------------------------------------Si vis pacem, para bellum.................................................Patriot Guard Rider
NRA Patriot-Endowment Lifetime Member---------------------------------------------Si vis pacem, para bellum.................................................Patriot Guard Rider
-
- Banned
- Posts in topic: 3
- Posts: 2593
- Joined: Mon Jul 28, 2014 5:16 pm
- Location: North Dallas
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
May I ask you to please share your data? Thanks!WildBill wrote:I agree that insurance companies are making medicine an awful place to work for doctors, but I still think it's about maintaining high salaries for doctors. Medical schools don't lack for qualified applicants. There are plenty of qualified and highly motivated students who are turned down due to lack of space. The high cost also deters many qualified students.Bitter Clinger wrote:Sorry guys, but your theory about medical schools limiting supply does not hold water. The problem is the insurance companies making a medicine an awful place to work - as physicians who care about patients are penalized for "low productivity" and Obamacare has made that 100X worse. As far as American born medical students, the number is decreasing because a majority of American kids just don't want to work that hard or deprive themselves of material wealth until their 30's. No problem filling physical therapy and forest rangery classes. RN's and PA's have an important role, but they are not able to replace experienced, trained physicians. The RN / PA push is many times simply a method to increase "productivity" and meet the infinite number of moronic metrics propagated by new MBA graduates and "lean six sigma" experts. If you desire the best medical care, and you are able to access it, always try to get to a University affiliated teaching hospital.WildBill wrote:I completely agree with this statement. If there were as many medical schools as law schools, heath care costs would be reasonable.VMI77 wrote:Well, the average engineer that I've encountered that was educated in Mexico has been better educated than the average engineer I've encountered in the US...across the board. In cases of high specialization that may not be true but then almost all the Phd engineers I know are foreigners and most of them were educated in the US. Then again I'm dealing with a small sample size so my experience may not be representative.
Also, I have the impression that admission to medical school may play a role in limiting the supply of doctors in order to keep doctors in the money, so it may be more of a quantity than a quality issue. I also think a lot of what doctors do has more to do with keeping supply limited than it has to do with the requirements of good medical care. IOW, RNs and PA's could do a lot of it.
So personally, I am not at all concerned that a doctor is foreign born or foreign educated. Come to think of it, I've run into to plenty of American born and educated doctors that weren't up to snuff, but not any foreign ones.
"You may all go to H3ll, and I will go to Texas." - Davy Crockett
"Fast is fine, but accuracy is everything." - Wyatt Earp
NRA Life Member
לעולם לא תשכח
"Fast is fine, but accuracy is everything." - Wyatt Earp
NRA Life Member
לעולם לא תשכח
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 7
- Posts: 17350
- Joined: Tue Jul 03, 2007 12:53 pm
- Location: Houston
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
I don't have any data to share or otherwise.Bitter Clinger wrote:May I ask you to please share your data? Thanks!
I have stated my opinions and impressions about the issues.
If working as an MD in the US is so awful why do we have so many foreign trained doctors wanting to work here?
NRA Endowment Member
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
You guys just make this stuff up? They have to be licensed but they don't need to be certified to practice in Texas.C-dub wrote:Ya'll are correct. Just because someone has a medical degree in another country doesn't mean they can just come on over and hang out a shingle and start taking patients. They gotta go through part of the process here to become certified and licensed. That even happens within the country from state to state. Doctors moving from one state to another must take a board exam to become certified to practice in their new state. Those that can't pass that exam after 3, IIRC, attempts cannot practice in the state. The number and time frame may vary from state to state.
I worked in a nursing department many years ago while I was in school. That's how I picked out my future daughter's pediatrician.
Re: Thoughts On Foreign Trained MD's
Not exactly 3rd world, but I used a dental surgeon in Houston whose degrees were Israel (not exactly 3rd world). He was an excellent surgeon and applied the local anesthetic better than any dentist/orthodontist I ever used.