To: DensaMensa
As I wrote clearly, marketing classes and business orientation seminars were part of the curriculum of the chiropractic college, in classes for undergraduate students. Lets not be so dense and Maureen Dowd-like in misrepresenting my observations.
To: friendly
As I wrote clearly, marketing classes and business orientation seminars were part of the curriculum of the chiropractic college, in classes for undergraduate students. Lets not be so dense and Maureen Dowd-like in misrepresenting my observations. Yes, there is quite a difference between practicing doctors taking time out of their schedules to attend courses to help with marketing or office bookkeeping, and class after class during school in marketing.
In all honesty, I wish my school had had something on the business side of practice. But some of the stories coming out of places like the decredentialed Life Chiropractic sound like the marketing side was STRESSED.
118 posted on
05/31/2003 6:02:29 PM PDT by
TomB
To: friendly
}As I wrote clearly, marketing classes and business orientation seminars were part of the
curriculum of the chiropractic college, in classes for undergraduate students. Lets not be so
dense and Maureen Dowd-like in misrepresenting my observations.
And as I clearly wrote, "That sounds like the typical Medical Doctors "Professional In-Service Training Seminar" usually held on board a cruise ship or at some exotic global spa. You aren't naive, are you?
Business is business, before or after graduation. Follow the money.
126 posted on
05/31/2003 6:16:22 PM PDT by
DensaMensa
(He who controls the definitions controls History. He who controls History controls the future.)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson