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Culture War Roundup for the week of July 24, 2023

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All doctors still have to pass the requirements don't they, regardless of how they get into medical school? Also I don't think it's necessarily linear between SAT and being a good doctor. My guess is you would want a minimum (higher than average) threshold and people at the top would probably specialise in any case. In between hard working, curious, empathetic, life-long learning could circumvent a lot- I don't know how these characteristics distribute but I don't think the average white doctor is that high a bar in the 10 min pharmaceutical dispensing slot I experience them in. Mostly they're just passing on the received wisdom of the medical model.

There was the somewhat recent change in the exam that leads to placements in residencies specifically to address racial differences in test outcomes.

But does it affect the baseline competence test? As far as I can tell, med school does the gating for competence, and residencies were further gatekeeping intended to drive up doctor salaries that weren’t awarded strictly meritocratically to begin with.

Medicine is not so rigorous that there isn't a glaring difference in quality of treatment and outcomes between the a 10th percentile and 90th percentile doctor.

I do still think US doctors are among the best in the world, but you shouldn't settle if you can help it.