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datashovel | 8 years ago

My guess is the doctors who don't spend extra time trying to solve the case probably shouldn't be paid for the time separately as is being suggested here.

It would appear to me that they have already lost the innate curiosity (if they ever had it) that made them want to become doctors in the first place.

Or they're not confident enough in their ability. Doctors are already paid substantially compared to most other professions, so for them to not put in extra time on the exceptional cases makes me feel they probably feel entitled. Too much so to have any impact on the rare cases.

The doctors who could realistically find the solution are the ones who will likely want to take the case on for free.

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majos|8 years ago

The idea that we should count on people to spend additional time on their job for free because they enjoy it seems overly idealistic. Sure, such people exist, but the easiest way to incentivize more time on a job is to just pay people accordingly.