- Wed Feb 08, 2017 5:16 pm
#32601
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True—CE. The correct answer choice is (E)
This stimulus contains a fact set discussing medical malpractice suits against doctors and how they could be avoided. It turns out that, in most cases, the patients’ perceptions that their doctors have acted negligently or carelessly is what prompts the patients to file malpractice suits. And perhaps the patients have good reason. The professor tells us that many doctors are now less compassionate than in the past because they view medicine as a science rather than as an art.
Also, the doctors face economic incentives that encourage them to treat patients rudely. The doctors not only treat patients rudely, but also patronize them and discourage them from asking questions. The professor states that lawsuits could be avoided if doctors learned to listen better to patients.
Not surprisingly, given that the stimulus is a fact set, this is a Must Be True question. While some Must Be True stimuli permit strong prephrases based on an inference that is apparent from combining the facts, this is not one of those occasions. Move on to the answer choices keeping in mind that the correct answer choice may be a restatement of any of the facts contained in the stimulus. Since the stimulus did not produce a strong prephrase, focus your attention on eliminating incorrect answer choices using the Fact Test, in which you make sure that the information in the answer choice can be proven by reference to the stimulus.
Answer choice (A): The first sentence in the stimulus stated that “most malpractice suits arise out of patients’ perceptions that their doctors are acting negligently or carelessly.” While the economic incentives to treat patients rudely may contribute to the patients’ perception of negligence or carelessness by the doctor, the facts do not support the stronger statement that those economic incentives are the main cause of the suits.
Answer choice (B): The stimulus told us that the economic incentives encourage doctors to treat patients rudely, not to view medicine as a science rather than as an art. In fact, it may be that because the doctors increasingly view medicine as a science, they are more likely to succumb to the economic incentives to treat the patients, their scientific subjects, rudely.
Answer choice (C): We are not given sufficient information to determine whether a malpractice suit is justified. Although the professor said that the suits are mostly driven by the patients’ perceptions, we have no reason to suspect that their perceptions are incorrect.
Answer choice (D): While the professor appears to consider the shift in the number of doctors viewing medicine as a science rather than an art to be problematic, it is not necessarily the case that the scientific outlook should be replaced entirely by a different approach.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus told us that the doctors who view medicine as a science are less compassionate toward their patients. The economic incentives influence doctors to treat their patients rudely, and “harried” doctors patronize their patients or discourage them from asking questions. Taken together, these facts support the statement that doctors’ actions create the perception that they do not care about their patients.
Must Be True—CE. The correct answer choice is (E)
This stimulus contains a fact set discussing medical malpractice suits against doctors and how they could be avoided. It turns out that, in most cases, the patients’ perceptions that their doctors have acted negligently or carelessly is what prompts the patients to file malpractice suits. And perhaps the patients have good reason. The professor tells us that many doctors are now less compassionate than in the past because they view medicine as a science rather than as an art.
Also, the doctors face economic incentives that encourage them to treat patients rudely. The doctors not only treat patients rudely, but also patronize them and discourage them from asking questions. The professor states that lawsuits could be avoided if doctors learned to listen better to patients.
Not surprisingly, given that the stimulus is a fact set, this is a Must Be True question. While some Must Be True stimuli permit strong prephrases based on an inference that is apparent from combining the facts, this is not one of those occasions. Move on to the answer choices keeping in mind that the correct answer choice may be a restatement of any of the facts contained in the stimulus. Since the stimulus did not produce a strong prephrase, focus your attention on eliminating incorrect answer choices using the Fact Test, in which you make sure that the information in the answer choice can be proven by reference to the stimulus.
Answer choice (A): The first sentence in the stimulus stated that “most malpractice suits arise out of patients’ perceptions that their doctors are acting negligently or carelessly.” While the economic incentives to treat patients rudely may contribute to the patients’ perception of negligence or carelessness by the doctor, the facts do not support the stronger statement that those economic incentives are the main cause of the suits.
Answer choice (B): The stimulus told us that the economic incentives encourage doctors to treat patients rudely, not to view medicine as a science rather than as an art. In fact, it may be that because the doctors increasingly view medicine as a science, they are more likely to succumb to the economic incentives to treat the patients, their scientific subjects, rudely.
Answer choice (C): We are not given sufficient information to determine whether a malpractice suit is justified. Although the professor said that the suits are mostly driven by the patients’ perceptions, we have no reason to suspect that their perceptions are incorrect.
Answer choice (D): While the professor appears to consider the shift in the number of doctors viewing medicine as a science rather than an art to be problematic, it is not necessarily the case that the scientific outlook should be replaced entirely by a different approach.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus told us that the doctors who view medicine as a science are less compassionate toward their patients. The economic incentives influence doctors to treat their patients rudely, and “harried” doctors patronize their patients or discourage them from asking questions. Taken together, these facts support the statement that doctors’ actions create the perception that they do not care about their patients.