Only
this time?
Not sure where I implied, or invoked by any chain of logic, that new doctors are stupid. And there's no magical freeze-dried doctors in special emergency-rations pouches just awaiting rehydration,
et voila..., but there are indeed medical schools with a half dozen or so year-cohorts still working their way from entry-level to ready to take on the world. With some pre-pre-med students perhaps still being inspired by the current needs of the world to aim into medicine (or care, or other related services).
I suppose the thing I might have been most circumlocutive about is the 'threat' that if medical staff don't get vaccinated that they don't have a place being medical staff (it is already a thing for care-worker in the wider care-industry, here in the UK, and it is looming to be a thing for doctors/etc).
I suppose I was saying that if you can't convince a trained doctor that it would be good to take precautions then something is wrong. Maybe with the convincsr, but then again maybe it's with the convincee.
Semidirect experience of this is that someone I know had a follow-up check on an injury (acquired and surgically resolved
just before the whole lockdown hit, the 'six month'ish follow-up happened maybe just two or three months back) and as part of general conversation with the consultant concerned, in the presence of his assistant, the question of vaccinations got mentioned, possibly by my acquaintence there as a patient, who had either just had or was about to get their booster. Consultant apparently said he was all up-to-date, assistant just shook his head and said "Nope!", apparently getting a dirty look from his boss. I'm no good at readng such subtle clues, but I trust the interpretations gathered by the erstwhile patient, and they highly suspected it to be a "you might think that, hell even
I might think that, but we're not telling people that... you should at least publically pretend to trust in the vaccine".
Call me a trusting gullible fool about my attitudes, if you wish, but I like to think I can make at least a half-educated judgement about whether vaccination has a net benefit to not just me but also others around me. When I see the opposing POV in medical professionals, right now I'm more doubtful of their 'professionality' than my own considered judgement.
There may be nuances, and a middle-ground, but no way to resolve things that seem to be diametrically opposed.
(And obviously these are exceptions, not a majority swing of attitude. But they are notable when encountered.)