>>11848888 Andrew Cuomo wants Retired Doctors Recruited NOW
There’s a saying with doctors and lawyers
“Hire the youngest doctors because they are well trained in the newest treatments and technology to heal and recovery of patients, the old doctors doesnt know what’s happening and how to use new treatments to heal people, so they recommend an aspirin and come back tomorrow. ==
(btw this is the very reason no one should be listening to Fauci or Birx)
And with lawyers “hire the oldest lawyers because they know the entire law and how to argue it in court” where the younger ones have no experience on court cases or can explain what the law means clearly.
Cuomo’s trying to pin the blame on the old doctors for the treatment and death count of the elderly. He plans on admitting more elderly to nursing homes to save on Medicaid costs and say the retired doctors advised him to do this
Cuomo is some kind evil son of a bitch; after all he’s the one that signed abortion up to time of birth and was happy and joyous doing so. He’s really, really evil.
“Young doctors, old lawyers”
George Dunea, attending physician
Additional article information
When it comes to choosing a doctor, or for that matter a lawyer, age is clearly one of the determining factors. An old saying on this subject, “old lawyers and young doctors,” would suggest that doctors should be young, enthusiastic, brimming with energy, but that lawyers are at their best when they are older, more seasoned, and more experienced.
Anthony Trollope addresses this subject (from the perspective of choosing a lawyer) in one his lesser known novels, Orley Farm. There he contrasts a naive young lawyer who returns from an academic meeting persuaded that the role of lawyers is to discover the truth, with one more experienced who has no time for newfangled ideas, insists that a lawyer's first duty is to his client, and wins a case even though the defendant later turns out to have been guilty.
For the healing professions, however, there is another saying: “Seek old physicians but young barbers.” It presumably dates from the days when the barbers and surgeons were part of the same cutting profession, and suggests that surgeons (and barbers) deteriorate with age (or at least their hands become less steady), but that physicians improve.
Notwithstanding these arguments, a Wall Street Journal writer has opted for youth. In “How to pick a doctor” (11 November 2002) he recommended choosing a doctor just out of training, one who would have recently seen many sick patients and been exposed to the latest science, and who would also be more likely to remember you, “since you aren't the millionth patient in his [or her] career.” He would have more energy than a veteran, and would be more easily available because he is just beginning to build a practice.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1126157/