You spelled it correctly.
Yes. The SChindler's doctor, Dr. H., advertises in the National Inquirer. Insurance companies won't work with him. He claims to have a Nobel prize nomination but couldn't produce it for the court.
He claimed he could treat patients like Terri but when asked for the information on ONE single patient he has treated like Terri, he couldn't do it.
The other Schindler doctor, I've forgotten his name, didn't know the difference between a coma and PVS.
Thanks. I'll look it up.
"Yes. The SChindler's doctor, Dr. H., advertises in the National Inquirer. Insurance companies won't work with him. He claims to have a Nobel prize nomination but couldn't produce it for the court.
He claimed he could treat patients like Terri but when asked for the information on ONE single patient he has treated like Terri, he couldn't do it. "
I heard Dr. H., when asked about patients like Terri that he's treated, started talking about a patient with cerebral palsey and all of the wonderful things he was able to do for her. Now, excuse me, but cerebral palsey is not the same problem that Terri has. Talking about dancing around the question. The host on that particular show didn't challenge him, either.
Well, he got a "nomination." The problem is that it came from someone with zero authority to nominate someone for the Prize. It holds about as much meaning as if I sent the Nobel committee a letter nominating my dog.