I was referring to how docs do brain surgery (e.g., infection prevention procedures, what instruments are used, where incisions are made, etcetera) rather than error rates or second opinions. I highly doubt that many non-experts (even a very motivated brain cancer patient) could successfully determine the appropriateness of specific surgical techniques for brain surgery. And since brain cancer is rare, it’s low stakes from a societal or even a personal survival point of view (although, it will become high stakes if you’ll live a lot longer than the current lifespan).
Nah, bridges (see other reply) and rockets aren’t high stakes enough to be worth worrying about.
I was referring to how docs do brain surgery (e.g., infection prevention procedures, what instruments are used, where incisions are made, etcetera) rather than error rates or second opinions. I highly doubt that many non-experts (even a very motivated brain cancer patient) could successfully determine the appropriateness of specific surgical techniques for brain surgery. And since brain cancer is rare, it’s low stakes from a societal or even a personal survival point of view (although, it will become high stakes if you’ll live a lot longer than the current lifespan).
Nah, bridges (see other reply) and rockets aren’t high stakes enough to be worth worrying about.