When I have a problem, I have a bias towards predominantly Googling and reading. This is easy, comfortable, do it from laptop or phone. The thing I’m less inclined to do is ask other people – not because I think they won’t have good answers, just because...talking to people.
I’m learning to correct for this. The think about other people is 1) sometimes they know more, 2) they can expose your mistaken assumptions.
The triggering example for this note is an appointment I had today with a hand and arm specialist for the unconventional RSI I’ve been experiencing the last 1.5 years. I have spent several dozen hours studying and reading into various possible diagnoses and treatments. I’ve seen a few doctors about it, all seeming uninformed.
This one thought it was Radial Tunnel Syndrome, a 1-in-10,000 nerve compression issue. I don’t explicitly remember ruling out that specific diagnosis, but I had ruled out nerve conditions because I don’t have any numbness or tingling. Turns out it can be a nerve issue even in the absence of those.
The cure might be as simple as taking Vitamin D (I know I should be because of Covid, and I bought some, but I’ve been bad about it).
This is why you talk to other people (and keep looking for those worth talking to).
I’m not sure how much reading and thinking on my own it would have taken to question that assumption and try this solution. A lot. Because we’re talking about an uncommon condition, I’m unlikely to come across it reading generally about my symptoms and hypotheses.
I erred in the same direction when researching Miranda’s cancer. Many doctors aren’t very good when you take them out of their usual range of practice, but some are pretty good and their area of knowledge does coincide with your problem. I might suggest visiting even five specialists for significant problems.
I mean, I don’t know if today’s doctor was correct. He’s plausibly correct which is better than I can say for most. He was worth talking to, even accounting the ~2 hour return trip from Emeryville to Stanford.
Talk to people. I expect this to generalize. I intend to do it for all my research projects, and maybe other projects too. You’ve got to talk to the people who expose your false assumptions and introduce you to your unknown unkowns.
Without medical training one has a lot of unknown unknowns when researching issues oneself. Talking things through with a doctor can often help to get aware of medical knowledge that’s relevant.
Yeha, it’s easy to get discouraged though when initial doctors clearly know less than you and only know of the most common diagnoses which very much don’t seem to apply. Hence my advice to keep looking for doctors who do know more.
My point was that even if you know more specific facts then the doctor you are talking to, he might still be able to tell you something useful.
When it comes to asking people to get knowledge total amount of knowledge isn’t the only thing that matters. It matters a great deal that they have different knowledge then you.
When I have a problem, I have a bias towards predominantly Googling and reading. This is easy, comfortable, do it from laptop or phone. The thing I’m less inclined to do is ask other people – not because I think they won’t have good answers, just because...talking to people.
I’m learning to correct for this. The think about other people is 1) sometimes they know more, 2) they can expose your mistaken assumptions.
The triggering example for this note is an appointment I had today with a hand and arm specialist for the unconventional RSI I’ve been experiencing the last 1.5 years. I have spent several dozen hours studying and reading into various possible diagnoses and treatments. I’ve seen a few doctors about it, all seeming uninformed.
This one thought it was Radial Tunnel Syndrome, a 1-in-10,000 nerve compression issue. I don’t explicitly remember ruling out that specific diagnosis, but I had ruled out nerve conditions because I don’t have any numbness or tingling. Turns out it can be a nerve issue even in the absence of those.
The cure might be as simple as taking Vitamin D (I know I should be because of Covid, and I bought some, but I’ve been bad about it).
This is why you talk to other people (and keep looking for those worth talking to).
I’m not sure how much reading and thinking on my own it would have taken to question that assumption and try this solution. A lot. Because we’re talking about an uncommon condition, I’m unlikely to come across it reading generally about my symptoms and hypotheses.
I erred in the same direction when researching Miranda’s cancer. Many doctors aren’t very good when you take them out of their usual range of practice, but some are pretty good and their area of knowledge does coincide with your problem. I might suggest visiting even five specialists for significant problems.
I mean, I don’t know if today’s doctor was correct. He’s plausibly correct which is better than I can say for most. He was worth talking to, even accounting the ~2 hour return trip from Emeryville to Stanford.
Talk to people. I expect this to generalize. I intend to do it for all my research projects, and maybe other projects too. You’ve got to talk to the people who expose your false assumptions and introduce you to your unknown unkowns.
Without medical training one has a lot of unknown unknowns when researching issues oneself. Talking things through with a doctor can often help to get aware of medical knowledge that’s relevant.
Yeha, it’s easy to get discouraged though when initial doctors clearly know less than you and only know of the most common diagnoses which very much don’t seem to apply. Hence my advice to keep looking for doctors who do know more.
My point was that even if you know more specific facts then the doctor you are talking to, he might still be able to tell you something useful.
When it comes to asking people to get knowledge total amount of knowledge isn’t the only thing that matters. It matters a great deal that they have different knowledge then you.
True, true.