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Date: | Wed, 8 Aug 2007 16:04:17 -0400 |
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The reference to Joel Chandler Harris is right on target.
In 1987, I wrote a paper for the American Journal of Medicine with the
title "Uncle Remus and the Cascade Effect in Clinical Medicine: Brer
Rabbit Kicks the Tar-Baby" to point out to physicians that there was a
risk in ordering too many tests or initiating too many treatments when
they don't know what is going on. Brer Rabbit's attack on the Tar-Baby
provided the model for how to get into trouble.
[The story starts when Brer Rabbit first greeted the Tar-Baby]
"Mawnin'!" sez Brer Rabbit, sezee - "nice wedder dis mawnin'," sezee.
[and, of course, Brer Rabbit did not get any response from the Tar-Baby]
Tar-Baby aint sayin' nothin'..."How duz yo' sym'toms see ter
segashuate?" sez Brer Rabbit, sezee.
[So, apparently, not only can corporsosity segasuate, but so can
symptoms.]
Patrick Ober
Wake Forest University School of Medicine
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