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Who is your favorite minor character or extra that only appeared in one Star Trek episode ever?

Lieutenant Selar on Star Trek: The Next Generation. While the show focused on the chief medical officer, a ship the size of the Enterprise, with a crew of 1014, has more than one doctor on its medical staff. Dr. Selar was one of those doctors. We only saw her in one episode - the season two episode “The Schizoid Man”. In that episode, the Enterprise has to handle two missions. They are enroute responding to a distress call from a highly respected scientist named Ira Graves, requesting medical aid, when they pick up another distress call, from a transport ship called the Constantinople. The Constantinople has experienced a hull breach and has 2012 people on board. The chief medical officer (Dr. Pulaski) requests to go to the Constantinople and recommends Dr. Selar to handle Ira Graves’ medical needs. I don’t know why the writers did that - maybe the actress that played Dr. Pulaski (Diana Muldaur) wasn’t available for most of the episode filming.Regardless, it introduced us to Dr. Selar. I believe she was the first Vulcan that we saw on Star Trek: The Next Generation (or at least the first to have dialogue). Apparently Gene Roddenberry felt that Vulcans were a bit one note and that that note had been sufficiently played on the original series.I was excited to see another Vulcan and found Dr. Selar delightful. I was disappointed we never saw her again.I don’t know why they never featured her again. It certainly wasn’t because the producers didn’t like the actress or the actress didn’t want to be on the show, because the actress, Suzie Plakson, returned to Star Trek multiple times as other characters. She played Klingon emissary K’Ehleyr (Worf’s baby mama) that same season and again in season four. She also played the female Q on Star Trek: Voyager, and an Andorian (Tarah) on Star Trek: Enterprise. Maybe after establishing her as such an important character as K’Ehleyr, they felt it might confuse people to have her play Dr. Selar again. Our loss.

Who are the best IAS/IPS officers India has seen and why?

Smt.Smitha Sabarwal, former Collector of Medak, Karimnagar dists., in the newly formed Telangana state (previously A.P). From 06 june 2014 she is Additional secretary to the Chief Minister of Telangana.A Bengali born, IAS officer working for Andhra pradesh cadre. Her Husband is an IPS officer.In 2001 IAS batch she got All India 4th rank.She marked a tremendous change in Sangareddy govt. hospital, Medak by equipping it with super speciality services. Smita Sabharwal - Smita Sabharwal ma'm has transformed.... Mainly she focused on Health facilities wherever she was posted.During 2014 elections for raising vote percentage she introduced Voter panduga (eng: Voter Festival) a scheme to present a "Tata Nano" car in lucky dip for voters.Schemes like 'Fund Your City' in Warangal as a Municipal Commissioner received appreciationsKarimnagar district government hospitals are equipped with Skype technology to maintain round-the-clock monitoring it, attendance of doctors and medical staff.Karimnagar district was awarded the Best district in PM's 20 Point Programme for 2012-2013On Telangana Formation day celebrations, she attracted many people's attention that she cried by seeing the relatives of the ones who died for bringing Telangana as a state. Photos from Medak Collector Smitha... - Medak Collector Smitha SabarwalBy seeing her work attitude, C.M., K. Chandra Sekhar Rao appointed her as, Addl. Secretary of Telangana as soon as he became CM.She is called Amma (eng:Mother) by fans.If you see her Facebook posts, mainly people of Karimnagar say "Plz come back to Karimnagar", "You are the Best Bureaucrat"...User:NischalSmita SabharwalSmita Sabharwal - Timeline Photos | Facebook

Why do doctors recommend not to become a doctor?

When outsiders speak of doctors, they are talking about…..Or……But when doctors speak of doctors, they are talkimg about…Or….Now, jokes aside…..(*Disclaimer: I can only speak on behalf of my home country, where quite a few friends are medical practitioners at the moment*)Doctors have an abnormally high mortality rate in China.From 2005 to 2010, the number of violent physical assaults against doctors and medical staff soared from 10,000 to over 17,000.[1]In 2006, Chinese Hospital Association reported 20.6 assaults per hospital per year. In 2012, the number rose to 27.3 assaults per hospital per year.[2]According to a survey research conducted in 2017, a total of 7,816 people were prosecuted for causing severe injuries on medical staff or inciting crowds at hospitals. 66% of the 146,000 doctors said they had suffered varying degrees of . or verbal assaults from patients.While worrying about their lives, doctors work insanely long hours and handle incredibly heavy caseloads on a daily basis. Partly due to the large population in China, there are always long lines and jam-packed clinics inside hospital. Commonly, doctors are expected to see more than 50 patients in one morning, which averages less than 4 minutes per patient.[3]Unlike doctors in the United States, medical science is by no means an elite profession. The compensation is much lower than bankers, engineers or accountants. In other words, the doctors are constantly underpaid and overworked. In the meantime, they must also bear the brunt of irrational fury from uncooperative patients and their relatives.Below are several anecdotal incidents which made the headlines in China. However, according to my friends working in hospitals, many more incidents have gone unreported.In 2012, Hao Wang was a resident physician at the First Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University. In a few months, he would begin his advanced training program at the University of Hong Kong's Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, but he never made it. Because one day while he was working as usual, a 17-year-old patient, dissatisfied with the treatment he had received in the hospital, stabbed him to death. Three other doctors were injured at the rampage.Hao Wang and his three colleagues were never involved in the treatment of 17-year-old Mengnan Li, who had been denied a treatment that he had requested. Li admitted that the stabbing was done on impulse. He was subsequently sentenced to life in prison.In 2013, three doctors at a hospital in eastern Zhejiang Province were stabbed by a 33-year-old patient, who was dissatisfied with the result of an operation on his nose. One doctor died, and the other two were seriously wounded.None of the three doctors were involved in the treatment of this man, who had intended to stab the doctor who treated him, but that doctor wasn't in his office. Therefore, he stabbed whoever was inside the office instead.Within the same month in Liaoning Province, a man committed suicide by jumping from a hospital building after stabbing a doctor 6 times after a disagreement over complications from surgery on his arm.[4]In 2014, a young doctor in Guangdong Province was cornered by an angry mob of more than 100 people and paraded around a hospital after a 37-year-old patient he treated had died the previous night. The patient was admitted into the hospital due to excessive drinking. He died in the early hours of the morning, and his family members claimed that the treatment he had receive was inadequate.The doctor was in tears as he was confronted by the angry mob which consisted of the decedent's family and relatives. The mob kept shouting, “This is the doctor who killed the patient!”[5]In 2015, Ou Lizhi, a chief physician of a hospital in Guangdong, was making her morning rounds when a man approached her and demanded medical attention. She told him to wait a moment until she finished checking the wards, but the man refused to wait. He suddenly pulled out a kitchen knife from his bag and wielded at Ou Lizhi, slashing on her arms, legs and shoulder.[6]Ou Lizhi suffered bone fractures in her right hand and left shoulder blade. According to the surgeon who had operated on her for more than 10 hours, she might never regain full use of her right hand.In 2016, 60-year-old Zhongwei Chen had retired from his position as the director of the executive department of stomatology of the Guangdong General Hospital. Before he could enjoy his days after retirement, Chen was followed by a patient whom he had treated 25 years ago. Inside his apartment, the patient stabbed Chen more than 30 times from head to toe before jumping off the 18th floor balcony in Chen's apartment.[7]Chen died of massive bleeding. According to the local police, this patient had repeatedly harassed Chen prior to this incident, making Chen seek help from the police.In 2016 alone, attacks by patients or their relatives resulted in the deaths of a pediatrician, an orthopedist and two dentists.In February 2017, an oncologist in Fujian sustained head injuries after a cancer patients attacked him with a hammer. And in November, a gastroenterology specialist in the northern province of Jilin died 19 days after being stabbed by a patient.In 2018, Dr. Zhao performed an endoscopy on a woman. As the woman kept complaining about her discomfort, Dr. Zhao decided to cut the procedure short. The woman's husband, however, was dissatisfied with Dr. Zhao's decision. Soon after the woman's surgery was completed, her husband ran into Dr. Zhao's office and plunged a knife into Dr. Zhao's chest.These are only incidents that I have accidentally come across on the news as an outsider. And they are frightening enough to deter me from pursuing medical science.Imagine the people who have witnessed their colleagues being attacked and murdered in front of them.Now that the brutal attacks on medical staff are so commonplace in China, every doctor has witnessed at least one colleague being attacked, or personally knows someone who has been attacked. Every practitioner in the field would go through such trauma either firsthand or secondhand, and question if everything they have done is worthwhile.Whatever they have seen it heard would be haunting them as long as they remain in the profession. They would be spending every day in fear, wondering if the same fate would fall upon them. They would be driven to tears by unreasonable patients every now and then, in spite of all the efforts they have put in. They would eventually find out that their efforts never paid off and rewarding moments were scarce.Every doctor I know has been subject to varying degrees of verbal and emotional abuse from their patients, who have harbored a great amount of irrational fury against the medical staff. They simply learn to live with it and try not to take everything personally, as long as they can still live to see their home by the end of the day.When they were aspiring doctors, they had sworn to commit their entire career saving lives and curing diseases. They were idealists with the ambition to change the world. As reality kicks in, their passion has been burnt out, and they have recognized the fire pit they jumped into.When they meet a new generation of aspiring doctors, they feel like they have seen themselves, and they feel obliged to inform them what on earth they are getting themselves into. After all, the medical profession has been too much glorified. Idealism alone would not get them far.Footnotes[1] Heartless attacks[2] Violence Against Doctors on the Rise in China[3] Beaten, stabbed and threatened: who’d want to be a doctor in China?[4] In Violent Hospitals, China's Doctors Can Become Patients[5] Weeping doctor paraded around hospital by angry mob after patient dies[6] Knife-wielding man attacks Chinese woman doctor making her rounds in hospital[7] Doctor severely wounded by ex-patient

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