ความคิดเห็นที่ 5
Ok Girls
Just EXe na ja ...
The interchange system for Japanese doctor license is special permission for a foreign doctor to work as a doctor in Japan without the Japanese doctor license. Japan gives the permission to overseas doctors instead of receiving the permission to work as a doctor for Japanese doctor in the overseas country without the overseas doctor license.
Japan made this agreement with US in 1971. There were already enough American (English speaking) doctors with the Japanese doctor license and more Japanese doctors prefer to obtain the American doctor license rather than the special permission, so this agreement was not useful and became invalid. (The special permission has a lot of restriction.)
If you obtain the Japanese doctor license or can transfer your country( NOT THAI NA ) doctor license to the Japanese one with some extra test, you can work as a doctor in Japan, but you need a permanent visa to open a clinic and Japanese nationality to become a civil servant. Management doctors of the public hospitals are the civil servants in Japan.
In order to pass the Japanese National Examination for Medical Practitioners I would imagine one would also have the ability to pass the Japanese Language Proficiency Test (JLPT) with a level 1 ranking (the highest). For those who have no prior knowledge of Japanese I have been told that it takes approximately five years of earnest study (preferably while living in Japan) to reach that level. I have heard of people (Dutch , French and chinese mostly) who have been able to pass the JLPT level 1 after only 2 years of studying, but the Dutch and chinese have superhuman language skills compared to monolingual English speakers.( It`s not easy sooo fuking gross Difficult jing jing na ka ) R u sure about your japanese language
It's not easy being green.It's not easy being The Doctor. and I won't ever cry infront of my patient, NEVER. It would be most disappointing to THEM and their psyche. They are expected to cry.. it's their first experience, and some even had previous experiences with other family members or acquaintances, but, for a doctor seeing this many times, me should be firm, consoling but crying??! Look here the DOCTOR's crying now what is more DESPAIRING than THAT?? they want to hear things like; it's not the end of the world, say things about God's mercy, spiritual stuff ... I'd get deeply emotional, but NEVER CRY. Leave it for them.
Doctors often focus on saving life at all costs, and that can be frustrating both for a physician and for a family that already has trouble coping with an inevitable end, as in many advanced cancers. In fact statistically physicians often put patients through too much for too long before finally agreeing to hospice care (which can offer a great deal of comfort to both the patient and the family in terms of pain management and coping).
Each family will have different cultural practices, different religions, and it is integral to be aware of the differences in cultural traditions relating to death and grief. ( Kao jai bor !!!! ) Death and dying is something often bypassed in psychology courses and avoided in medical focus which seeks to promote life whenever possible. Some doctors scare elderly patients into giving up DNR's by focusing on the dire threat of death. On the other hand other doctors (and hospice nurses, particularly) can be very pushy in persuading patients who may not quite be ready to face their own mortality into doing a DNR. There's a very delicate art to guiding people through death and dying. As a whole I think that nurses are more comfortable with the death process than doctors are, and it may be in part due to the more holistic focus of nursing education and the longer time spent with patients and families. No one would ever criticize a nurse for crying with a family. ...
Sorry i`m not at my laptop .........( No thai font na ka )
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examining your feelings toward (Nada Sousou)
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27 พ.ค. 51 18:08:36
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