LittleDrummerBoy
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I had that thought too, but there are times when the surgeon does something that as a patient, without more knowledge, I would want to say is too rough or aggressive. For instance, in many cases, the surgeon has to agitate and tear tissue to encourage bleeding, in an effort to aid the healing process post-surgery. There are many instances like this, that could be on purpose and necessary, or at the same time could be accidental and unnecessary, or even damaging.I feel we're evaluating them pretty much from the point of view of the patient. Are they pulling the skin too much, are they moving the needle cleanly? Are they putting sutures in the way that makes taking them out very simple or will another medic have to delve to get it out? Do they look confident and competent? I know most of the people they are working on are zzz but when they wake up, the pateints are going to be aware of that stuff. Trained staff tend to be bad at evaluating from patient point of view.
Edit* I guess my point is that, without them being more specific about what they want, a lot of people doing these HITs will assume they want either a patient / laymen perspective, or that of a professional. We're all armchair doctors when doing these to an extent. I think if they were more clear, they would get more useful results. How do they know the perspective that each worker is taking when they watch the videos and rate them? How much relevant knowledge a worker has, etc. It just seems like they can't get much that is definitively useful out of us.
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