I just had a realization. Follow me, for a moment, please.
I was watching the end of a movie on BBC, and a commercial came on for Windows 10; they had a young Doctor, (yes, probably an actor) that was touting her use of the new system and it's capabilities, because "she needed to show people that her work mattered - that it could save lives". And two thoughts struck me at the same time;
The first was - I know these people. I worked with Doctors, Nurses, etc at Dartmouth College, and this was their worldview. They were in the business of curing, of understanding - of teaching others so the knowledge could grow.
The second thought was - how many people think that the Doctors and Nurses are just in the 'business' so they can make money?
Yes, I know there are some people that are like that - but the folks I worked with at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center were the finest people I've known in my whole life. The money was inconsequential - they worked their asses off to help - to cure. To save and to teach.
And too many people simply don't believe their earnestness.
Most people are unhappy with what they do. A job for them is simply a means to an income. They don't know what it's like to feel that your career is a calling and the pure joy of doing what you love doing to get your paychecks. They are always critical of people who do.
Agreed. I've known many in the health-care industry and can echo your findings -- they have a legitimate calling to help other people and they work their asses off to do just that!
Then, you have the rest of the posse... This is the crowd of administrators and managers and hangers-on that realize that (1) People will pay anything to stay healthy and alive and (2) There's a whole subset of the industry dedicated to squeezing every dime out of them. This is where the (American) system starts to break down. We start pretending that healthcare is a traditional business and money becomes the focus. "Love of all money is the root of all evil."
If you want to improve health care in the U.S., you need to take the notion of profit-and-loss out of the system. Get rid of the "businessmen." Heck, I'm enough of a pinko commie to say "hang the businessmen" and ditch capitalism all together.
Then we can address the issue of a physician that's dumb enough to use Windows 10...
Many are in it for good reasons, nut not necessarily the right reasons.. that is to say it might not be their natural vocation..but it doesn't mean they are incompetent or greedy.
Maybe it was parental and family expectation. Maybe it was self-delusion.
Perhaps for the prestige and social status and all the benefits that brings for self esteem etc.
Who knows what motivates some people?
It's so complex.
Some are in it for the money, probably those with private practices. I'd say too that most dentists are in it for the money - I don't trust a single dentist not to do unnecessary work on my teeth.
I would hope that most people go into medicine for altruistic reasons, but the new religion is neoliberalism.
Sadly professionalism, ethics and empathy are frequently regarded as dirty words or childish yearnings these days. Similarly the use of foundations are frequently ignored.
End result a world of empty hollow people.
Have a read of the 5 laws of human stupidity
[en.wikipedia.org]
For those who want it, here's a link to Carlo Cipolla's essay, "The Basic Laws of Human Stupidity". [linkedin.com]