Gary Dobry – academic and medical qualifications claims, verbiage excised
Here's some useful information from a very reliable source.
"The following Illinois appellate case may be of interest. The defendant was convicted in the original trial of "(1) representing herself to the public as being engaged in the practice of medicine, and (2) attaching the title of doctor or M.D. to her name indicating that she is engaged in the medical profession as a business”.
This despite the fact that the defendant "had never treated a patient during her employment at the Center" (for Human Reproduction) according to the Center's medical director."
state.il.us
Here's the "short collection" of medical qualifications claimed by Dobry with his excess verbiage excised.
Extracts
“. A PA is one of two things, a foreign MD or a graduate of a PA program in the states, I studied in france. A PA does physicians work, but cannot sign out the case, meaning, the attending physicians signs it out. In my case I performed, in my training, approx. 300 autopsies a year, in practice, my specialty waS SURGICAL PATHOLOGY, BUT i PERFORMED APPROX. 20 autopsies a year. I also free-lanced quite a bit.
You will find foregn MD's working as PA until they get into a residency program, I opened a gym. So you see Shell, you're wrong again, I performed the autopsy and the attending, who is legally responsible, reviews my work and signs out the case.
A cardiac PA, for example, doing a by-pass, will procure the femoral artery, open, close and suture. We don't clean floors, though I mop them everyday here at Pug's.
I can also assure you Shell, the patient was very dead before I performed the autopsy.
ragingbull.lycos.com
“the Bears used to watch autopsy films I supplied them with to get motivated before games”
ragingbull.lycos.com
“Well Pauly 'IS' out of my league...Pauly's a guy who posted on SI that I "killed" a patient.....at AUTOPSY ! LOL....from what I can recall , and it was one case of many mind you...the patient was pretty dead BEFORE I Performed a POST MORTEM examination ! “
ragingbull.lycos.com
“I was a PA, I defined where PA's come from, PA graduate programs or foreign medical graduates, I also said most of my workload consisted of surgical examinations, averaging no more than 20 posts a year (autopsies). A "coroner" is forensic pathology, my area was anatomic pathology.” ragingbull.lycos.com
“one of my degrees is the Diplome de Francais, from the Sorbonne. As for someone who claims to live in Italy, and an academic, I shocked you don't know Europe is on a six-yr. program. Are you sure you're not from Milan, Texas? I lived on a floor with many Italian students, all confirm Italy was a six year program like the rest of Europe, an American doesn't need MCATS to apply to a French program, and since education was socialized, it was free, no student loans.”
ragingbull.lycos.com
“I made my way thru school, Universite' de Paris, by playing the guitar in the metros of Paris”
Message 2687281
“I made my living training fighters when I lived in Paris”
ragingbull.lycos.com
“A medical examiner is a 'forensic' pathologist, My area was anatomic pathology. Medical examiners may sign out the case, but generally only perform the microscopic exam , the gross exam is performed by an associate pathologist or PA. The same is true in hospitals, also understand a resident may not be board certified , and all his work must be signed out by an attending. You pretend you know about everything, but you only demonstrate how much of a joke you actually are. Do yourself a favor, call any teaching hospital, do some diligence.”
ragingbull.lycos.com
“Patients die, their families either sue the hospital and/or the physician. There are literally millions of these case seeking compensation, this is why medical costs are so high, 99 times out of 100, the hospital and/or physian(s) settle. As was the case here. I was never never served because I performed an autopsy, and only the gross examination, the case was signed out by my attending. Pathology depts. are contracted by the hospitals and fall under their insurance companies. The attending I performed the autopsy for only found "cause of death", he to, as was the Pathology dept, not served.”
ragingbull.lycos.com
“I'm guessing from your monicker that you and I come from a background in Pathology.”
Message 4796579
“I remember walking into surgpath after a 1hr. drive, seeing a row of specimens wrapping around the block, including colon resections and prostate with about abillion cassettes to be submitted, then the tech handing you 2 charts for pending autopsies that must be completed by lunch! Do I miss medicine? What d'you think?”
Message 4898794
“I studied under a very prominent Italian pathologist.”
Message 4927903
“I'm curious why you'd think a physician would have such a great knowledge of Latin, also I don't think I have to submit a cirriculum vitae on this thread to you. So, true my knowledge of Latin is slight”
Message 2544431
“I have seen pathologists leave skin biopsies, prostate bx's (FNA), etc. , in the container, then the techs have to go back and find the container in the waste when the surgeon complains!! I had an attending who did an axillary disstection for lymph nodes in a breast CA case...he said he found "no" nodes....the surgeon went nuclear, the attending told me to go back and do more dissection...I didn't fing 2 nodes, or 5 nodes, etc., I found 30 nodes!! 1 the size of an almond!! Believe me, some of these pathologists are dangerous. The way medicine is today, hospitals hiring more administrators and less medical personel, its getting very dangerous to go into many of the larger hospitals,”
Message 4945483
“My training is in pathology too! If we missed the tiniest lesion hiding under a mucosal fold of a colon resection, or the positive nodes in the pericolic fat...the patient is DEAD! “
Message 5070061
"Laboratory Medicine/Surgical Pathology/ 'performed 22K surgical exams a year,"
Message 5070193
“You forget,I've performed hundreds of autopsies, the best one was I was performing with a resident named Karla, we were on the Autopsy call....anyways this post had tobe performed and it was late in the day and we just wanted to cut & strut. Karla agrees to the upper block (dissection, thoracic cavity) and I take the lower, which includes running the bowel, but heck, she's a babe, so I'll do the dirty work. Anyways we read the chart and start the evisceration. I notice on the external exam a bump alomg the inguinal area, upon blunt dissection I discover the pump to a penile prosthesis. Karla is attempting to remove the upper block ( heart and lungs ) and I start pumping this guys 'Mr. Friendly', anyways,the patient is at full 'glory', I mean 'up' for the occassion, and this gentleman was very blessed in this area,I think I figured out why a pump was nessecitated! Anyways,I look over at Karla who is cutting away,I say;"hey Karla...check this out!"....well!, she lets out a scream and her scapel flies from her hand and is now firmly embedded in the one-hour ceiling!! I take my scalpel, slice the pump....and down she goes!!!”
Message 3469596
“I remember calling SurgPath, "Cut N' Strut"!! At one time I did ALL the gross pathology, all the surgical exams, AND was on the call list for autopsies. This particular hospital performed 22K surgicals a year, or about 150 day!... so , consider the complex cases like colon resections and radical mastectomy's sitting in acid formalin for a lymph-node dissection BEFORE the histotechs left for the day, all those radical hysterectomy's, hypertrophic prostates with those gazillion cassettes, the usual gall bladders, UHGG! Those melonomas with all those inked margins and a gazillion more cassetes, then YOU STILL HAD TO PERFORM THE AUTOPSIES TOO!! Boy Cyto, I really miss that grind!! NOT!!! We also had to teach residents from other specialties going thru on rotations, I made videos and just told 'em to go watch and quizz later, unless of course the resident was a cutie!! “
Message 4911331 |