Guest guest Posted April 2, 2004 Report Share Posted April 2, 2004 Hmmmm - maybe he wasn't a doctor but he does sound like a healer. > I saw this one earlier today on one of the news websites. I had > several reactions while reading it. > > (1) Being Norwegian myself - of course he was good; he's Norwegian > (2) They must have REALLY good medical schools in Norway > (3) I hope he wasn't one of Aase's doctors, and > (4) What does it say about the quality of care in that area when > (per the last line in the article) - the best doctor you have ever > met ... wasn't. > ----------------- > > Hoax Doctor Praised for Bedside Manner > > Apr 2, 12:15 pm ET > > STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - A Norwegian medical student posed as a > qualified doctor for two years in a small Swedish town and got top > marks from senior doctors and his patients after the case was > uncovered. > " We have studied his journals to check on the patients. He was not a > bad doctor, " said Leif Spangen, former chief surgeon at a hospital > near the town of Torsby where the 34-year-old man had more than > 1,200 patients. > > " Yes, he performed minor surgery such as surgery on skin > abnormalities, nail infections and simple extractions, " Spangen, who > is reviewing the case, told Reuters Friday. > > Doctors said they had not found a single mistake by the Norwegian, > who had studied medicine for four years in Poland but never > qualified. His bedside manner was widely admired and one female > called him " the best doctor I have ever met. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 3, 2004 Report Share Posted April 3, 2004 Hi, This has been all over the papers here a while ago. This was front page stuff, he-he... Does not say anything about Norway at all though, because it was in Sweden he did this... He is a Norwegian, but went to medical school in POLAND, then moved to Sweden and got a job there... The way they wrote it, it could easily be misunderstood because it said " A Norwegian medical student " , then they said at the end of it that he went to medical school in Poland... So he never was in Norway at all, except maybe on vacation... So lucky me haven't had to be anywhere near this guy, he-he... As I understood it, he was nearly done with medical school, but had a few exams left, which he meant to do. He himself still means he has not done anything wrong, that the problems is that his employers in Sweden made a lot of assumptions... As I remember, he claims that he told them when he started there that he had a couple of exams left, and that he planned on taking them. Anyway, he came there, and got so much trust, because he obviously was a " very nice guy " and seemed to be a good doctor... Amongst others he started an organization to provide medical help to refugees - in Africa, I think. The org. went down though, he never succeeded except in getting a local company to donate a jeep for the org, which he obviously was seen driving around in - this lead to a lot of media attention but didn't come up until after they discovered that he had not finished his med. school... He also got involved in different local stuff etc.... LOL... It is outrageous though how this small Swedish hospital manage to hire a " doctor " and don't even ask for his diploma... How scary. I really don't think this is a common thing though. But on a more serious note... If he had tried to find a job here, he wouldn't have come far though. He would have had to first get his papers reviewed and approved, then do his final exams, then get a job as an intern. At work we have had several refugees who are doctors, and the requirements they are met with, are really strict. They have to take various courses at the medical faculty at the Oslo University, they have to take a lot of tests to test their actual skills, even if they maybe have worked like a surgeon for 20 years, they have to do an internship all over again etc. etc. All to make sure that they really have the skills required... Some haven't succeeded, especially because they require that they are so good at the Norwegian language, something that can be tough for some. The system can even seem like it is a bit paranoid and don't trust that other countries have good enough medical schools, but I guess they just don't take any chances, even if I do think there are some differences depending on which countries they come from. Some countries don't have a medical education system though which is considered good enough to be approved here. E.g. a doctor from Sweden or Denmark, wouldn't have to go through all this, but they have to let them review their papers, diploma etc.... If a doc from e.g. the US were to come here to work, I think they first have to go through general courses in the language as well as " Medical Norwegian " . And their papers are reviewed by a governmental agency specializing in approving the education papers of foreigners. This agency also reviews all the papers refugees bring with them. But anyway, I really think this case, with all the media attention it got, will lead to some good, that all the hospitals in Sweden will _have to_ get standard routines to follow when it comes to hiring foreign doctors... The doctor in this case was obviously so popular, amongst patients and colleagues, so he got a lot of trust and somewhere along the line they let him get away with not giving them the papers, probably because he was so nice and seemed so skilled, they couldn't imagine that anything was wrong... Big mistake! They are reviewing all the cases he has worked with though, and the last I read, they have luckily not been able to find that he has done anything wrong (as this piece also says). So even if he did not have his papers in order, he must have been quite good, I guess... (I actually think that is the case, rather than all other doctors there being so bad;) He-he... But luckily this has nothing to do with Norway, except from the fact that he is Norwegian... LOL I must admit, I have got more than one good laugh reading about this case in the national newspapers... The whole thing has been so outrageous it has been really funny, but I guess his patients and colleagues haven't exactly found it to be that funny... Aase Marit >I saw this one earlier today on one of the news websites. I had >several reactions while reading it. > >(1) Being Norwegian myself - of course he was good; he's Norwegian >(2) They must have REALLY good medical schools in Norway >(3) I hope he wasn't one of Aase's doctors, and >(4) What does it say about the quality of care in that area when >(per the last line in the article) - the best doctor you have ever >met ... wasn't. > ----------------- > >Hoax Doctor Praised for Bedside Manner > >Apr 2, 12:15 pm ET > >STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - A Norwegian medical student posed as a >qualified doctor for two years in a small Swedish town and got top >marks from senior doctors and his patients after the case was >uncovered. > " We have studied his journals to check on the patients. He was not a >bad doctor, " said Leif Spangen, former chief surgeon at a hospital >near the town of Torsby where the 34-year-old man had more than >1,200 patients. > > " Yes, he performed minor surgery such as surgery on skin >abnormalities, nail infections and simple extractions, " Spangen, who >is reviewing the case, told Reuters Friday. > >Doctors said they had not found a single mistake by the Norwegian, >who had studied medicine for four years in Poland but never >qualified. His bedside manner was widely admired and one female >called him " the best doctor I have ever met. " > > > > > >To learn more about EDS, visit our website: http://members.rogers.com/ceda2/ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 3, 2004 Report Share Posted April 3, 2004 Hi, He had studied medicine at a Polish medical school for 4 years. He had almost finished medical school, but had some exams left to be properly finished to start as an intern, but instead he managed to get a job as a MD at a Swedish hospital in a small town... Aase Marit At 02:44 +0000 03.04.04, mohrs6 wrote: > >Hmmmm - maybe he wasn't a doctor but he does sound like a healer. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 3, 2004 Report Share Posted April 3, 2004 I just finished reading the rest of the story in your other post - so I guess this guy was in a bit of a hurry to get started - managed to get a jeep - hmmm, maybe a huckster instead of a healer. Really pays to know the whole story before I comment - I'll be more careful next time. > > > >Hmmmm - maybe he wasn't a doctor but he does sound like a healer. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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