Medicine Canada
A community for Canadian physicians and medical professionals
๐ While this community is intended for Canadian discussions, you are free to post about other medical systems. We're all in this together :)
Related Communities
- Medical Community Hub
- Medicine
- Medicine Canada (๐)
- Premed
- Premed Canada
- Public Health
For better links and descriptions, see the pinned post in the Medical Community Hub ([email protected])
Rules
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No requests for professional advice or general medical information. Please do not solicit medical advice or share personal health anecdotes about yourself or others.
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No promotions, advertisements, surveys, or petitions.
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Link to high-quality, original research whenever possible: Posts which rely on or reference scientific data (e.g. an announcement about a medical breakthrough) should link to the original research in peer-reviewed medical journals or respectable news sources as judged by the moderators. Sensationalized titles, misrepresentation of results, or promotion of blatantly bad science may lead to removal.
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Act professionally and decently: /r/medicine is a public forum that represents the medical community and comments should reflect this. Please keep disagreement civil and focused on issues.
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Protect patient confidentiality. Please anonymize cases and remove any patient-identifiable information.
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No memes or low-effort posts: Memes, image links (including social media screenshots), images of text, or other low-effort posts or comments are not allowed.
These rules have been modelled after /r/medicine. While some rules were modified or skipped as this is a much smaller community, we can revisit the rules as we go. Thank you :)
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The UK has a similar system. Critically though, doctors or pharmacists can override it.
I ended up cycling over the various generics of the medication I take, over a few months. I could definitely tell the difference between them. As for why I cycled. The system would try and automatically switch me off, unless it was either overridden, or I had already tried that medication. By cycling, I could find out if a generic worked the same (and so save the NHS money). It also stopped the system randomly choosing me to switch.
Overall, I think it's not a bad idea, it just needs to be done VERY carefully, with override capabilities built-in, and acceptable to use.