• trafguy
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    1 year ago

    I’ve heard this is a problem among nurses. Having just enough knowledge to be able to think you know what you’re doing is dangerous. I suppose that’s also a reason education shouldn’t stop at the bare minimum to perform your work tasks. (obviously not all nurses, but statistically much more so than doctors)

    • blujan@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      I know several nurses who think they know more than doctors.

      They all are wrong on stuff that’s so easily verifiable that I can’t believe these were in charge of whole nurse areas in important hospitals.

      Knowing all this sucks.

      • kite@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        It’s so much worse than just the nurses. I work alongside a host of different first responder groups, and the vast majority of them are unvaxed conspiracy nuts. Many of these people are dear to me, and I can’t tell you just how crushed I was to see these otherwise normally intelligent people I care about just… lose their damn minds over covid. I think it permanently broke something in me to be surrounded by them and watch them spiral down that rabbit hole. The one I’m around the most is convinced the flu vaccine from just before covid hit turned her injection site magnetic. She actually had me take a magnet and hold it to the spot and when the magnet did not stick to her arm, just kept saying I wasn’t getting the right spot. Didn’t matter where I put it. Didn’t stick, but it was because I was doing something wrong. Not because it’s fucking ludicrous to claim a shot magnetizes you.

        I am so goddamn bitter now.

    • Chais@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Dunning-Kruger effect. Just enough knowledge to think they know everything and not enough to recognise they barely scratched the surface.