
You need to be able to study and also have good manual dexterity.
Dexterity may have some innate qualities, but what’s important is training.
If you want to become a doctor, having good manual skills is less important than being able to interact with people and study.
Everyone has to remember the arrangement of the tightly packed puzzle inside the body.
Like a Da Vinci that gives advice from an AI dolphin.
I hope they can start performing surgeries.
First and foremost, you need to be able to study…
>>5There aren’t many super doctors who are good at studying, skilled with their hands, and overflowing with physical stamina, right?
>>9That’s why there are few people who become surgeons… Among them, neurosurgery requires even more specialized skills and has particularly harsh working conditions, making it a rare breed despite being essential.
Everyone was saying why the thread image is left unchecked, but there is a background to that.
Everyone, become neurosurgeons!
>>16But even if I say I want to, they won’t let me into medical school, right?
>>21First of all, I wonder if it’s tough both academically and financially to get into medical school…
There are certainly situations where even people who have the skills to pass the national exam and become doctors cannot enter medical school due to various circumstances.
It’s better to give up on someone who can’t even pass the national exam.
>>21If you wanted to, you should have studied.
>>16In today’s era, it’s understandable to avoid surgery due to litigation risks and the outdated, black-hearted nature of medical departments.
>>22I hear that it’s becoming a trend to switch from surgery to beauty.
Surgeons do more than just perform surgeries; they also conduct outpatient consultations, manage perioperative care, and spend a lot of time planning surgeries, so it’s not enough to just be skilled with their hands.
However, whether or not an accident occurs that could cause someone’s death seems to greatly depend not just on intelligence or skill, but also on a personality trait like the caution to withdraw at the right moment.
There are many doctors who are less skilled or clumsy than the one in the image, but the reason similar situations don’t happen frequently is because of that.
I’m good with my hands, but I can’t stand smells.
I was told that I would get used to it after doing it for a few years, but even after completing my training, I still felt unwell, so I gave up and realized it wasn’t for me.
No matter how skilled their hands are, I don’t want a fool performing surgery.
>>8So, should we have the studious Takeda-kun do it?
You also need the physical strength and a strong spirit to endure a harsh working environment.
Studying is a prerequisite since we’re dealing with the human body…
You need physical strength, mental strength, and willpower too.
It might be possible to have surgery that lasts more than 12 hours.
>>12Not just surgeons, but doctors in general have physically demanding jobs, so many of them worked out by running marathons or going to the gym outside of work hours.
I often used to run around the hospital parking lot.
My brother is a gastrointestinal surgeon, but he has some sort of surgery practice kit at home and practices every day.
I am the only one in my family who couldn’t become a doctor and ended up as a nobody.
I worked at a hospital for a while, but even if my personality is like that, the people around me lift me up, so that’s reassuring.
No matter how skilled you are at cutting, surgery is still a burden.
A dentist acquaintance said, “It’s like a craft, so you need to have good manual skills,” while helping me with various things.
Well, he graduated from a prestigious university’s dental school and he’s also good at making plastic models, so he’s the kind of person who seems to have it all.
Maybe there are people who work hard because it’s the only profession where they can handle guts.
Is there really anyone who wants to become a doctor so badly that they study extremely hard, even if they might not make it…? Considering that people’s lives depend on their judgment and skills, and that it can be an extremely demanding job with no guaranteed fair compensation…
Emergency was tougher than surgery in every way.
I hate to say it, but the dying ones come, so the pressure is immense.
>>28Can’t you do it with a carefree attitude like Takeda-kun, thinking it’s okay to die?
>>29That question is the Takeda Mind.
>外科医ってとにかく手先の器用さが必要で勉強できるかどうかあまり関係ない気がするけど実際どうなの勉強できても手術ミスしちゃったらどうしようもないじゃないYou’re an idiot, huh?
What does being skilled with your hands matter? What knowledge do you have to make use of it?
What is it?!?
Even if someone is incredibly good at studying, there are actually people who seem incompetent…
Education is important, but it’s clear from watching the news or working that it’s not enough on its own.
Takeda-kun seriously lacks medical ethics before anything else.
It’s a profession that ordinary people can’t handle, so first, we set a threshold that requires a significant amount of study.
Watching doctors complain and people jumping in to challenge them makes it understandable that more people are going to cosmetic surgery.
The illustration in the thread shows that there are mistakes in prescriptions, so there is no knowledge or technique.
What Takeda lacks is professional ethics.
Even if you say “doctor” in one word, there are plenty of fields that are not directly related to life.
It’s not that they’re stupid, after all.
Among doctors, there seems to be an actual image of surgeons being sensory-oriented and physically strong.
Doctors generally have an athletic image.
That’s an example of being able to become a doctor even without enough, so that’s unnecessary.
I remember seeing somewhere that being impatient leads to becoming a surgeon.
You can see the results right away.
Everyone makes mistakes, and since it’s dealing with the human body, I understand that unexpected situations can arise.
So, are you analyzing the accident that occurred and making countermeasures for the future?
It’s a job that you can’t do without physical strength, intellect, mental strength, communication skills, effort, and technical ability…
>>45I hear both talks about needing everything and the idea that being human can be forgiven, but why is that?
>>46It’s not good if you don’t have all of your ideals.
If you say things like that, there won’t be any candidates! So, don’t you think we have no choice but to use it even if it’s somewhat lacking?
Surgeons can stand for long hours during surgeries, so physical fitness is indeed necessary.
The doctor has a strange job where they have regular work starting in the morning the day after working a 24-hour shift.
I want to think that the fact the thread’s image has a medical license is a bug in this world.
Being a surgeon is not something one should aspire to; the competition in that field is just too brutal.
If you’re going to monopolize the patient that much, then you might as well work yourself to death.
I feel like having twice the number of doctors and half the salary would make the staffing just right.