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Michael Jackson's Doctor Has Ben Released From Prison.
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http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/en tertain ment-ar ts-2470 4030
Should he have been jailed in the first place and should he now be allowed to practice once again?
Should he have been jailed in the first place and should he now be allowed to practice once again?
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No best answer has yet been selected by anotheoldgit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If I could just set the scene:
In the USA 90% of doctors are private and less than 10% employed and in the UK it is the opposite 90% are employed ( NHS) and 10% private.
In the US the financial success of your private practice is dependant upon the number of patients that you see and in the UK your salary is guaranteed for life independant of your work load.
It is inappropriate on this thread to go into the pros and cons of either system.....so I won't.
Here is a cardiologist who is approached by a famous world wide celebrity to "attend" to his medical needs and a handsome retainer included.
Yes, the doctor would have a good idea as to what that would involve.........should he turn it down?
In retrospect, yes he should....but he didn't, he took on a druggie who was a time bomb waiting to go off.........living on borrowed time......a matter of who was going to give the coup de grace.......the patient himself or the doctor?
Well, we all now know that the doctor was in the wrong place at the wrong time and he has paid for it.
Should he have gone to jail?......yes..........I think that he should.
Should he be allowed to practice again? ...yes......I think that he should.
He has served his sentence and he is still a trained cardiologist.
He will still make a good living, although not " flourishing."
Will he kill again? He has certainly learned a harsh lesson....one hopes.
In the USA 90% of doctors are private and less than 10% employed and in the UK it is the opposite 90% are employed ( NHS) and 10% private.
In the US the financial success of your private practice is dependant upon the number of patients that you see and in the UK your salary is guaranteed for life independant of your work load.
It is inappropriate on this thread to go into the pros and cons of either system.....so I won't.
Here is a cardiologist who is approached by a famous world wide celebrity to "attend" to his medical needs and a handsome retainer included.
Yes, the doctor would have a good idea as to what that would involve.........should he turn it down?
In retrospect, yes he should....but he didn't, he took on a druggie who was a time bomb waiting to go off.........living on borrowed time......a matter of who was going to give the coup de grace.......the patient himself or the doctor?
Well, we all now know that the doctor was in the wrong place at the wrong time and he has paid for it.
Should he have gone to jail?......yes..........I think that he should.
Should he be allowed to practice again? ...yes......I think that he should.
He has served his sentence and he is still a trained cardiologist.
He will still make a good living, although not " flourishing."
Will he kill again? He has certainly learned a harsh lesson....one hopes.
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