The question is: who should call him/herself a doctor (if you respond "a doctor should" I will hang myself)?
Hmmm....

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The question is: who should call him/herself a doctor (if you respond "a doctor should" I will hang myself)?
As pharmacists we give away so much free advice (our own stupidity opening ourselves up to litigation if we did not have the whole story) from people who just randomly stop by the store - not even our real customers? That is just one of many reason I work in a hospital setting vs retail.My friend, Chris, is a dentist in Manhattan. When he was heavily involved in cave and technical diving, he would think nothing of calling me at any hour of the day or night to ask me questions about diving. On one cave trip, I wondered if I had chipped a tooth because my tongue felt something wasn't right when passing across the tooth. I asked him to look at it and let me know if I was correct in my assumption. His response, "Oh, no way, man! I've been doing dentistry all week. This is my vacation." Geez, I just wanted him to let me know if I needed to see a dentist about it right away. I remarked, "Dude, you call me at 2 A.M. leaving a bar and ask me about ratio decompression." He said, "Yeah, but diving is fun!"
I am of the belief that anyone who has completed a doctoral program, regardless of their field of study, has earned the right to be called a doctor. Whether it is a doctorate of law, doctorate of education, philosophy, etc. A physician is simply a person who has completed their doctorate of medicine. No more or less important than any other field of study. It seems that people outside the profession make a bigger deal out of it than those within.
I think there's more to it than this. A doctorate of medicine, or law, or any other professional school is quite a bit different than having a PhD.
Hmmm....
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I suppose it is a matter of perspective. My mother has her PhD in Psychology. I don't believe that she knows things that only a few people in the world could comprehend. I do believe that she is very competent in her area of study and respect her as I would any other doctor.
Whatever the reasons may be for seeing differences in people who have completed a doctorate degree, I still maintain that they have earned the right to be called a doctor. IMHO to suggest otherwise belittles their hard work and dedication to their field of study.
Whether your knowledge is shared amongst others in your field or you are working on ground breaking research, your completion of a doctoral degree is still valid. There are many MDs who are working exclusively in research environments. They have forgone their clinical side altogether. There are some who have completed an MD/PhD program and dabble in both the clinical and research environments.
While I don't want to hijack the initial purpose of this thread (even though I am not completely clear on its intent), I did want to comment on the post.
from people who just randomly stop by the store - not even our real customers? That is just one of many reason I work in a hospital setting vs retail.
I'm not trying to say one is more legit or more valuable than the other, only that they are different (professional vs research degrees).
I was trying to say that the general public wants to know if you're the 'hey doc, look at this sore on my neck' kind of doctor and not if you're a 'hey doc, tell me again about how 12th and 13th century sculptures tell us about pre-columbian maize diffusion' kind of doctor.
When someone hears 'Dr. so and so' outside of certain professional contexts, they want to show you the sore on their neck.
When I taught college, I actually preferred "professor" to "doctor".
Teaching surgeons often choose to be called, "Professor."
When someone hears 'Dr. so and so' outside of certain professional contexts, they want to show you the sore on their neck.