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noodleman

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noodleman
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
Those are junior doctors on dirt pay. Consultants earn up to £95k a year.
noodleman
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
I've had 4 consultants over the past 10 years. The first, who was forward thinking and kept up with the latest in the field, helped me acquire an insulin pump. Sadly, I had to transfer clinics when I moved across the country and have never had another consultant that helpful.
noodleman
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
This was my experience when I was first diagnosed, too (minus closed loop - it was the early 90's). They put more effort in with children, as it's a dedicated team. Same as gestational diabetes care.

Expect to start having appointments cancelled and to go years without hearing from them once she is passed to the adult diabetes team.
noodleman
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
Diabetes consultants can earn salaries up to £95k. Far from what junior doctors earn.
noodleman
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
My diabetes consultant is on more than the national median income and only works part time in a low cost of living area of the UK. They are far from hard done by. Throwing money at them will not change what is effectively a systemic error in how they approach the disease.

The NHS is underfunded, but this isn't a problem of funding. The lack of a scientific approach to managing diabetes is strictly down to ineptitude.
noodleman
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
I'm T1D and currently working on something like this because diabetes healthcare in the UK is effectively non-existent past diagnosis.

Managing the condition isn't too difficult after 30 years of it, but dealing with the politics of NHS diabetes care is astronomically more difficult than it was in any decade previously. In my experience, if you are not pregnant, or you aren't at risk of passing out in the next 15 minutes, they don't care. Whatever long term consequences you experience are another department's responsibility.

A trend I've seen is that younger diabetes nurses and doctors are extremely dependant on tech (CGMs, insulin pumps), but don't comprehend how they work or what the data means. They don't know what patterns to look for beyond a 24hr window and generally seem to think everything is a bolus ratio or basal problem, overlooking other settings such as correction factor, duration, etc.

Because they are tech illiterate, vendor lock-in is becoming an issue, as no health tech companies want you using another tool except the one they get paid for. So I find myself being swapped from platform to platform as they change my devices every year or so, each one being less workable than the last. Glooko only allows 6 months of historic data to be viewed, and only through their web UI. Abbot refused to let me download my data after I was forced off their platform to Glooko. I was happy on Tidepool, but it doesn't work with my current set of devices.

No, more funding will not fix this. Threats of criminal punishments for lazy medical professionals and unlimited fines for anti-competitive behaviour from diabetes tech manufacturers will.
noodleman
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
It's hard not to prefer the ecosystem that is designed to make it as painful as it can be to switch to a competitor.
noodleman
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
I'm all in on Linux at this point - it's been usable for a long time.

My comments not really about whether it works, as we know it does, it's about how we go about getting the word out there.
noodleman
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
They've been at it for years. I'd genuinely be surprised if this cracked the top 10 worst things Microsoft have done to Windows users.

I think there would need to be a concerted effort at a grass-roots level, say from r/buildapc, to get new PC gamers onto an alternative for there to be a considerable shift away from Windows.
noodleman
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
This is actually an interesting point. There's a tendency to assume that the core of a story is the same, even if the way it's told is different. I wonder how many generations of retellings it takes for us to notice significant differences.
noodleman
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
I think a lot of people aren't necessarily happy because they're highly skilled at it, but because its a default state of being. If it was purely a skill then environmental or biological factors wouldn't play any role.

If anything, we learn to be unhappy. It's no secret how toxic academia can be - I would say the original commenter's personal observation that only 1% of people are happy is probably because many people around them are deeply unhappy.

I know I felt this way when I was in a different career. Once I moved out of that field, I was astounded to find out that people are actually not depressed most of the time. I won't lie, the improved financial situation that followed was a big factor - it's definitely easier to be happy when you're not poor!

So, I agree, a recalibration is in order. But that might involve removing yourself from certain social groups as much as it requires a thought pattern adjustment.
noodleman
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
Probably not as absurd as you think. I reckon if you dropped an American in a random town in Scotland (or even a northern English town, for that matter), they would also need to use very broken English and hand gestures to communicate as well. Glaswegian or Geordie is near incomprehensible to RP speaking Brits, yet alone to an American who's only exposure to Scottish is Mel Gibson as William Wallace.
noodleman
·vor 2 Jahren·discuss
This is a good assessment. 1 and 2 are why the system won't change, but I don't think they were intentionally designed with that in mind. I think it's a hang over from academia, bearing in mind how many of the top engineers at FAANG are PhDs.

Well, that and how almost nobody who successfully finds employment after "grinding" leetcodes wants to remove the barriers for entry.

I think Leetcoders can't envisage a better way to assess someone than by subjecting them to the same kind of hoop-jumping you get made to do in university. They're not interviewing you for a job as there's no module on interviewing candidates on the CS curriculum, and don't have much professional experience outside of academics or software engineering. They're simulating a dissertation defence, because that's how they were assessed for their competence.

That's my charitable interpretation. If I'm being cynical, it's elitism - a way of making sure you're "one of us" (read: obnoxiously academic, Type-A personality, "logic over feelings").
noodleman
·vor 4 Jahren·discuss
I will always assume that any kind of plausible deniability is lost just by design of the law unless they really can't pin it on an individual. The computer misuse act of my country is vaguely defined for this reason, as I imagine the same laws are in the US.

For example, "It wasn't me. A friend used my Wi-Fi!" and similar arguments will not fly as you can be seen as responsible as bill payer. Those kind of defenses could even be considered admissions of guilt.

It's concerning to see how many people suggest you claim your Wi-Fi was unprotected if accused of something. This will more likely be used against you if anything.