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The Cruel Irony of Medical Expertise

Here’s something that might surprise you: the more experienced your doctor becomes, the harder it can be for them to talk to you. Not because they care less, but because expertise creates a kind of blindness.

Think about anything you know really well — driving a car, cooking a favorite meal, doing your job. Now try to remember what it felt like to do that thing for the very first time. You can't. Not really. Those memories are gone. And this is exactly what happens to doctors. The more they learn, the less they can remember what it felt like not to know it. Psychologists call this the curse of knowledge. And in medicine, it can be dangerous.

A patient I’ll call William is a 45-year-old mechanical engineer. Never smoked. Runs marathons. He came in with a persistent cough and was found to have a lung mass. His doctor — skilled, caring, experienced — sat down to explain the findings. She saw an educated, analytical man and gave a clear, thorough explanation. She felt the appointment went well.

William heard two words: lung mass. After that, almost nothing.

While his doctor was explaining possibilities and next steps, William’s mind had already gone somewhere else. It did what frightened minds do — filled in the gaps with the worst possible conclusion. He thought he was dying. He was certain of it. He sat there nodding. He recognized the words — biopsy, staging, treatment — but they didn’t land. His doctor mistook his nodding for understanding. He left with a follow-up appointment and very little useful information. In fact, what William had was a treatable fungal infection, not cancer.

His nodding made things worse. His doctor read it as confirmation that she’d been understood. She had no idea she’d lost him after the first two words. The more frightened we are, the calmer we can appear. And the calmer we appear, the more our doctor assumes we’ve understood. That’s the loop at the heart of medical miscommunication.

So what breaks the loop?

If you expect important news, bring someone with you. Not because you can’t manage, but because fear disrupts memory — and a second person will hear a different conversation.

Ask what words mean. Terms like positive, aggressive, and acute mean something very different in medicine than in everyday life.

And try this: summarize what you’ve heard. “Just to check I understand — you’re saying…” This simple habit catches misunderstandings before they turn into fear at 3 AM.

It’s also what I teach doctors to do at the end of the appointment — ask patients to explain back what they’ve understood.

A medical consultation is not a lecture. It’s a collaboration across a huge knowledge gap — routine for one person, frightening for the other. Knowing that changes everything.

— Dr. Michael Wilkes with a Second Opinion

Further Reading:

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