cherdano, on 2021-January-03, 10:41, said:
Health visitors inject 8-week olds during home visits. Some vaccinations are done at pharmacies.
All of this is true, BUT they are doing this task AND following guidelines set down by a medical practitioner.
If they deviate from those guidelines and there are adverse consequences THEN they will be in trouble.
The guidelines are established by qualified medical practitioners.
The medical practitioner does not have to be the person that you see when you have an ingrown toenail.
In the case of vaccinations, it obviously isn't.
This is not a random rant about the importance of health care workers that are not doctors.
I have personally suffered considerably because of the 'care' afforded to me by doctors in whom I have placed my trust.
The health care system is only as strong as it's the weakest link. Just like every other system.
I am a supporter of the principle that every member of an organisation should be trained to act 'to the limit of their competence' and not beyond it.
Who determines what the limit of competency is in the health care system? People with medical qualifications.
As in any other organisation measurement and certification of competence can be devolved to others that have a 'demonstrated level of competence'
Dr Fred Hollows training of health care works to perform sight-saving cataract removal surgery is a famous example.
In America, my understanding is that an 'anesthesiologist' who is a medical practitioner can be responsible for the activity of several 'anesthetists' in a group of operating theaters.
When a person receives a vaccination in the USA who is responsible - the FDA. The FDA is famous (pre-Trump) for its care and integrity. It is because of the FDA that thalidomide was not registered for use in pregnant women in the USA, although clinical trials in the USA did have the inevitable tragic consequences.
There are countless examples of how this works.
In the cloistered realms of Australian (it may be different in other countries) academia where I spent my working life it is different.
Every individual academic is responsible for what they say and do. It is almost impossible to unseat an academic even if they say the most outrageous things (and boy do they).
Obviously, injections are given by people other than medical practitioners. Clearly, this is a good thing.
But it is not the point.
At the top of the responsibility pyramid, there will be a qualified medical practitioner. The nurse/pharmacist etc may be acting out of the line of sight of a medical practitioner that does not mean that the actions they take are not ultimately sanctioned by medical practitioners.
It sounds like your syllogism has an undistributed middle term. - medizinischterminologischermittelschmerz perhaps .