We are taught from a young age to finish the entire job. I confess that I still need reminding on this virtue. I suspect that all of us must plead guilty to partial task completion from time to time. Have you ever washed some of the dishes remaining in the sink? How about cleaning out part of the garage and rationalizing that this is enough work for one day. How many of us have projects around the house that are waiting patiently for our attention as they sit frozen in time? There are more stark examples when stopping short if the finish line is downright absurd. Consider some examples extracted from my imagination. An artist paints only on one side of the canvas, and I don’t mean for artistic reasons. A car wash cleans only the rear section of automobiles. A publisher distributes books that are 100 pages short of their true length. Silly, right? It’s easy to conjure up similar examples regarding the medical universe. A surgeon washes only one hand prior to surge
MD Whistleblower presents vignettes and commentaries on the medical profession. We peek 'behind the medical curtain' and deliver candor and controversy in every post.