There are things that you can do today that, years ago, there was nothing. The community today needs to know that with MRI and the current medications the view is good.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I'm ticking things off my list: I had a tumor removed; I had spinal surgery; I had four surgeries in three months.
I wouldn't be here today if it were not for the NHS. I have received a large amount of high-quality treatment without which I would not have survived.
When I was a child, doctors sent my grandmother home in a wheelchair to die. Diagnosed with end-stage heart disease, she already had so much scar tissue from bypass operations that the surgeons had essentially run out of plumbing. There was nothing more to do, they said; her life was over at 65.
As a doctor, I will take it and make it my mission to heal the nation, reverse the course of Obamacare, and repeal every last bit of it.
I think we are faced in medicine with the reality that we have to be willing to talk about our failures and think hard about them, even despite the malpractice system. I mean, there are things that we can do to make that system better.
The wonderful thing about modern medicine is that so many of these complaints that used to signify old age and decline can be coped with.
My doctor is wonderful. Once, in 1955, when I couldn't afford an operation, he touched up the X-rays.
Modern medical advances have helped millions of people live longer, healthier lives. We owe these improvements to decades of investment in medical research.
I was diagnosed with Graves' disease, an illness of the thyroid gland. Instead of surgery, I was given radiation treatment.
It's important right now to continue to have your patients contact their senators and their congresspeople to say we have a problem. We want you to help solve it, we want you to be involved.
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