| 24-05-2026 01:25 PM |
| Unregistered |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
What do you guys think of the recent case where doctor was suspended for not referring a cellulitis case to ed.
I read the judgement from the tribunal, it appears that it is expected to refer the patient at the first visit.
- I must admit that I have seen and treated cellulitis with outpatient antibiotics for DM patients before, usually with return advice and early review within 2 days, and many do recover with outpatient treatment.. I usually check and document the DP pulse (but wouldn't surprise me if I do forget on the odd occasion)
- I just wonder/worry if drs will become more defensive as a result, all cellulitis in dm pts straight to ed.
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if every doctor documents at the end "advised to go to ED but declined " andof course mentiob it tobthe patients, willthey be absolved of any potential litigation in terms of treatment choice? provided diagnosis is reasonable. but then even if diagnosis is wrong, doctor can.always argue "had you gone to ED as I had advised, the right diagnosis would have been made clear by the ED wit their more sophisticated diagnostic tools"
why dont they justuse templates like in hospital. u know those working in hospital got a smartphrase list. everything just comes out, so if anything happens backside is covered. maybe the smartphrase listis even vetted by lawyers lol
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| 18-05-2026 06:03 PM |
| Unregistered |
What do you guys think of the recent case where doctor was suspended for not referring a cellulitis case to ed.
I read the judgement from the tribunal, it appears that it is expected to refer the patient at the first visit.
- I must admit that I have seen and treated cellulitis with outpatient antibiotics for DM patients before, usually with return advice and early review within 2 days, and many do recover with outpatient treatment.. I usually check and document the DP pulse (but wouldn't surprise me if I do forget on the odd occasion)
- I just wonder/worry if drs will become more defensive as a result, all cellulitis in dm pts straight to ed.
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| 11-05-2026 01:07 PM |
| Unregistered |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
theyre just givinf the industry what irs looking for
ever since i was an MO peeople tell me i need to be visible
i need to show people im doing something
and that somethint is not ward work, not in OT. people dont csre if you can do surgery or not.what they want is you can publish and have connections
It is going to conferences, presenting some lame paper during m&m when everyone wants to end fast to go to OT.
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yes so dont be the person who stays behind doing ward work. be the person who goes for conferences overseas. even if take MC ( i have a headache because of research), skip ward work etc to do your research stuff (can always tell con that you'll do research in the afternoon since no clinic and there is a coMO who can run the wards ... if Con say yes, then registrar dont dare to stop you, so your co-MO will have to tank it all)
dont worry, because consultants will favour someone with something to show rather than someone who only does the behind the scenes work , and will actually think youre even more enthu than your poor coMO who stupidly goes to OT, goes and settle ward work and stuff.
1 year down the line, you will have several publications to your name and conferences attended, while your coMO who does all the ward work which was supposed to be shared will get nowhere because nobody logs how many patients he clerked, how many consents he signed, how many OTs he attended , and whether he can do a certain procedure etc
he will basically be invisible, while you're already one foot in residency.
thank me later guys.
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| 30-04-2026 06:37 PM |
| Unregistered |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
Same advice to foreign maids:
Please complain to MOM.
Late payments are considered Red flags.
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sure or not can complain to MoM. if so easy dont you thibk he would have done it?
also, earn above certain.amount plus youre a professiinal....u sure Is still under MOMjurisdiction
ever heard of TDAM?
btw, last time i heard a large aesthetic chain stopped paying few months before they closed down
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| 30-04-2026 03:07 PM |
| Unregistered |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
Do people feel that there is too much BS going on in LinkedIn nowadays? I see many people (ranging from junior-senior doctors, allied health personnel, corporate management people) posting things like, I attended this forum/conference/I spoke to this person and learn about the importance of building systems.../holistic care etc.. gives me goosebumps sometimes. I wonder if recruiter/employers are actually looking for such publicity nowadays
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theyre just givinf the industry what irs looking for
ever since i was an MO peeople tell me i need to be visible
i need to show people im doing something
and that somethint is not ward work, not in OT. people dont csre if you can do surgery or not.what they want is you can publish and have connections
It is going to conferences, presenting some lame paper during m&m when everyone wants to end fast to go to OT.
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| 26-04-2026 09:13 PM |
| Unregistered |
Do people feel that there is too much BS going on in LinkedIn nowadays? I see many people (ranging from junior-senior doctors, allied health personnel, corporate management people) posting things like, I attended this forum/conference/I spoke to this person and learn about the importance of building systems.../holistic care etc.. gives me goosebumps sometimes. I wonder if recruiter/employers are actually looking for such publicity nowadays
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| 22-04-2026 02:32 PM |
| Unregistered |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
Would like to ask the locums here, is it common for private groups/clinic to not pay their doctors for a shift or delay their payment, and if it happens, what can one realistically do? (Other than stop locuming for that clinic).
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Same advice to foreign maids:
Please complain to MOM.
Late payments are considered Red flags.
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| 21-04-2026 12:58 PM |
| Unregistered |
Would like to ask the locums here, is it common for private groups/clinic to not pay their doctors for a shift or delay their payment, and if it happens, what can one realistically do? (Other than stop locuming for that clinic).
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| 18-04-2026 09:41 PM |
| Unregistered |
Meanwhile the insurance industry and the government keeps making it seem like doctors are the main cause of inflation in healthcare.
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| 14-04-2026 09:53 PM |
| Unregistered |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
I seriously feel doctors in Singapore are grossly underpaid (or maybe HK is just way too overpaid)
Worked in banking in both HK and SG, and regularly visits clinics in both places as a sick man + occasionally covering healthcare companies in my job. SG doctors are generally a lot more knowledgeable (and GRH specialists really do their pubs etc.) and patient if you are private paying.
HK doctors give you maybe 6-10mins for a specialist consultation costing S$250 and you are only seeing a 35yo specialist who just finished 1Y intern + 6Y specialist training + 2-3 post-specialist experience. You guys are having it tough, by the time someone in HK is almost done with his ENT or cards training, you guys are still queuing for a spot.
I remember asking ENTs in HK for long term solution to my dust mite allergy. Visited a few and I was told there is no long term solution. Use Avamys, netipot, change your bed sheets and use antihistamine if needed. Lol. Only 1 of them told me maybe I can try sublingual immunotherapy but his chain doesn’t stock it. Went back to SG and almost every ENT knows acarizax or allergy shots and equivalent stuff. GRH doctors even answered me a few questions when I followed up with some questions on long term efficacy.
When I was reviewing the financials, I was quite shocked some clinics with 4 docs in HK can pull in S$40m revenue a year, then the senior doc who owns the clinic makes S$10-15m a year, the 35yo colorectal surgeons and clinical oncologists were making S$0.8-1.5m each. I am not sure how much SG pays but looking at this post it is highly unlikely even a derm can pull that money as a salaried doc at such age.
During an investor call, some aesthetic clinic chain in HK mentioned doctors just don’t want to become glorified beauticians because FMs here are paid S$30k a month in PHI right after FHKAM, and clinical chains often pay 40k, solo GP clinics can go north of S$60-80k if you see 60 patients a day. So they paid HK$700k (S$110k) monthly to their experienced aesthetic GPs who are fully utilized). Lol you can guess the reaction of how these financial bros react once they heard the numbers.
I know this post is really off topic and weird. But I truly appreciate you guys. Your professionalism and hard work really made a difference to me and I am sure it made a difference to many singaporeans as well. You are the silent heroes to our society.
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Maybe that's why they trying to push for FM specialists in Singapore
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