He’s a DPT. Not an MD but still has the title of Doctor.It still isn’t clear; is he a physician or a physical therapist? There are PhD physical therapists, but medical school doesn’t go that direction.
Yes. He says he has health insurance.have you discussed health insurance with him? Very few part time jobs cover this.
I see. You can understand the confusion. He has a doctorate but he isn't "a doctor."He’s a DPT. Not an MD but still has the title of Doctor.
I see. You can understand the confusion. He has a doctorate but he isn't "a doctor."
True enough, but it would be unethical for him to introduce himself to patients as “Doctor So-and-so.”If he has a doctorate, he is a doctor. He is not a physician.
True enough, but it would be unethical for him to introduce himself to patients as “Doctor So-and-so.”
No it wouldn't.True enough, but it would be unethical for him to introduce himself to patients as “Doctor So-and-so.”
Are you happy now? I even updated the OP.Please edit the title to reflect reality. The new grad has a Doctorate in PT and wants to work PT, not FT. Perhaps his curmudgeonly old uncle is confused? You, and your nephew, get off my lawn.
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.
No it wouldn't.
True enough, but it would be unethical for him to introduce himself to patients as “Doctor So-and-so.”
Maybe a small rural community. Doctors around here complain that they don't have enough patients to make a living, and they're probably right. Almost all the ones I know are either semi-retired or work for hospital systems (especially Basset) at their affiliated outpatient clinics. But one who only wants to practice part-time anyway may be able to pull off an old-school private practice while building barns on the side.
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As for what you should do, I might offer suggestions, but not advice. No good deed goes unpunished.
There ARE, unfortunately, all manner of folks calling themselves Doctor these days simply based on some educational program endowing them with same. Do I think “Doctors” of Holistic Medicine, Naturopathic Medicine, Accupuncture, etc should be called Doctor - no.
There ARE, unfortunately, all manner of folks calling themselves Doctor these days simply based on some educational program endowing them with same. Do I think “Doctors” of Holistic Medicine, Naturopathic Medicine, Accupuncture, etc should be called Doctor - no.
Don't forget Chiropractors and Educators.
Everyone is a doctor.
You can even get a doctorate in aviation at some of the fancy pants aviation schools.
I am a doctor and a sergeant. Not that kind of either. But those titles were bestowed on me just as legitimately as any university bestows an MD on anyone. And FWIW, there are many MDs who are not licensed to practice medicine. Is it unethical for them to use the honorific?Ethical or not, I think it's BS. It's like those charter operators that dress a non-qualified pilot in a pilot uniform and place him/her in the right seat of a single pilot aircraft, such as a King Air. The dude is listed as a passenger on the manifest, but the passengers assume they have two qualified guys up front.
Sure it's legal and done all the time, but you're knowingly misleading someone with no effort made to correct the misconception. I think that sucks.
I guess that is dependent upon the denomination. My wife is a pastor and she is not a Doctor.And pastors ;-)
I think Doc Holiday started the whole thing.
I am a doctor and a sergeant. Not that kind of either. But those titles were bestowed on me just as legitimately as any university bestows an MD on anyone. And FWIW, there are many MDs who are not licensed to practice medicine. Is it unethical for them to use the honorific?
If he has a doctorate, he is a doctor. He is not a physician.
Not only is it unethical, it's downright fraudulent. In a medical context, "doctor" means "physician." If someone who isn't a physician introduces himself as "Doctor" without clarifying, he has said something that, while arguably true, is deliberately misleading.
If a 747 captain is on a ship and he walks onto the bridge and says, "I'm Captain Smith," he isn't telling the truth, even though what he says is kind of true. So it is with PhD physical therapists and nurses.
I guess that is dependent upon the denomination. My wife is a pastor and she is not a Doctor.