Most of us working in healthcare are familiar with the common perception that the term doctor = physician. As such, most of the non-physician practitioners who hold a doctorate degree do not refer to themselves with the title of doctor.
@wrbix is right when he says There ARE all manner of folks calling themselves Doctor these days simply based on some educational program endowing them with same. There is a reason for this. More fields are requiring the doctorate degree. Thus, more folks are seeking a doctorate degree either as a requirement or as a perceived advantage. Given that student loan debt is non-dischargable even in bankruptcy and student loans are guaranteed, lenders are willing to lend ever increasing amounts. So, more schools are offering those degrees and charging ever increasing amounts of tuition. The result is more folks are graduating with burdensome student loan debt.
Personally I believe we would serve ourselves (and the public) better if we didn't mandate doctorate level education (which is mandated by our national organization), but instead focused on increasing skill and proficiency in clinical aspects such as regional anesthesia, nerve blocks, etc.
There is also a perception in the public that a physician is a better provider than a non-physician counterpart which I believe while understandable is simply not true. The general public is simply not aware that unlike pilots who have required tasks to be current, no such requirement exists in healthcare. I believe it is a correct statement that most US practicing anesthesiologists work as a team with and "supervising" CRNA's. That means they manage patients preop, postop, are present at the induction of anesthesia, perform nerve blocks, etc. We, the CRNA's typically manage the course of the anesthetic start to finish. Further, I think it is correct to say that most US anesthesiologists do not provide general anesthetics on their own daily, or have even done so in years. Would you want your pilot to have never done a flight on his own in years? I am not berating them, in fairness they typically are better than we are at the tasks they perform most often such as preop management, post op management, nerve blocks, etc.
@wrbix is right when he says There ARE all manner of folks calling themselves Doctor these days simply based on some educational program endowing them with same. There is a reason for this. More fields are requiring the doctorate degree. Thus, more folks are seeking a doctorate degree either as a requirement or as a perceived advantage. Given that student loan debt is non-dischargable even in bankruptcy and student loans are guaranteed, lenders are willing to lend ever increasing amounts. So, more schools are offering those degrees and charging ever increasing amounts of tuition. The result is more folks are graduating with burdensome student loan debt.
Personally I believe we would serve ourselves (and the public) better if we didn't mandate doctorate level education (which is mandated by our national organization), but instead focused on increasing skill and proficiency in clinical aspects such as regional anesthesia, nerve blocks, etc.
I am a CRNA. I agree with what Ken says here except few of us would say I'm Dr. so and so. My wife (also a CRNA) has a doctorate but never uses the title doctor for the reasons in this thread.No, that would be perfectly ethical for him to introduce himself that way. It may be a bit misleading, but it is still ethical. Nowadays more and more "allied" professions are doing that.
A physician anesthesiologist will say: "Hi, I'm Dr. Jones and I'll be your anesthesiologist today." CRNAs (Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists), nurses, not physicians, have commonly said to the patient: "Hi, I'm John and I'll be your anesthetist today." That's a perfectly true statement and the vast majority of patients will not make the distinction that a nurse versus a physician will be providing their anesthesia. Most patients will think the CRNA is just being friendly and casual by using their first name.
This has gotten even more confusing recently as CRNA programs now grant all their graduates a doctorate in nursing, so it is now perfectly acceptable for them to say: "Hi, I'm Dr. Jones and I'll be your anesthetist today." That sounds very much like what the physician anesthesiologist says. Very few patients are informed enough to understand the difference. Such is the state of our health care today. Everyone wants cheaper and the way to provide cheaper is to use "providers" with less education.
There is also a perception in the public that a physician is a better provider than a non-physician counterpart which I believe while understandable is simply not true. The general public is simply not aware that unlike pilots who have required tasks to be current, no such requirement exists in healthcare. I believe it is a correct statement that most US practicing anesthesiologists work as a team with and "supervising" CRNA's. That means they manage patients preop, postop, are present at the induction of anesthesia, perform nerve blocks, etc. We, the CRNA's typically manage the course of the anesthetic start to finish. Further, I think it is correct to say that most US anesthesiologists do not provide general anesthetics on their own daily, or have even done so in years. Would you want your pilot to have never done a flight on his own in years? I am not berating them, in fairness they typically are better than we are at the tasks they perform most often such as preop management, post op management, nerve blocks, etc.
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