Have spent quite a bit of time in the last 3 months in various hospitals, visiting or accompanying my dad for his appointments. I'm now rather familiar with the different food courts, Polar Cafes, pharmacies, drop-off points, car parks etc.
Spending so much time hanging out at hospital food courts and waiting areas, I realise that many young female doctors are really good-looking. On top of that, they are also well-groomed and well-dressed. Some people just have everything, don't they? Brains and looks. Okay, that's not everything but it's quite a lot. And it's much more than I can say for the young male doctors who tend to look either very bookish or old.
Back to the young female doctors, how do they manage to look so fresh? Thought they work very long hours. I'm sure I look half dead after 2 or 3 hours there, and I'm neither doctor nor patient. It's really tiring just waiting around here and there.
I have also concluded that the doctors with the best bedside and clinic manners are male doctors in their 40s.
To go back to the dengue topic, now that hospitals are postponing non-critical operations, do the doctors affected get re-deployed to deal with dengue patients or are they just getting a temporary breather from their usual work?
Spending so much time hanging out at hospital food courts and waiting areas, I realise that many young female doctors are really good-looking. On top of that, they are also well-groomed and well-dressed. Some people just have everything, don't they? Brains and looks. Okay, that's not everything but it's quite a lot. And it's much more than I can say for the young male doctors who tend to look either very bookish or old.
Back to the young female doctors, how do they manage to look so fresh? Thought they work very long hours. I'm sure I look half dead after 2 or 3 hours there, and I'm neither doctor nor patient. It's really tiring just waiting around here and there.
I have also concluded that the doctors with the best bedside and clinic manners are male doctors in their 40s.
To go back to the dengue topic, now that hospitals are postponing non-critical operations, do the doctors affected get re-deployed to deal with dengue patients or are they just getting a temporary breather from their usual work?
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