Give Gregory House a blue uniform and Starfleet tech, and that's MY doctor.
"Please state the nature of your idiocy."
"Please state the nature of your idiocy."

.....
McCoy sometimes gives his patients "what for" too, but some need it.If you know the guy as a friend,not just a doctor, that helps, too.
Unless you're a Vulcan where he will insult your physiology while treating you and treat you as 'the other'.Definitely, of all the doctors he's the most plausible one.
Unless you're a Vulcan where he will insult your physiology while treating you and treat you as 'the other'.
What, Worf avoids his physicals?
At the time Journey to Babel was made, the Vulcans would not have been one of the Federation's founding members. The idea didn't start floating around tie-in material until the late 80s or the 90s and wasn't made canonical until the Enterprise episode Zero Hour in 2004.Kelley apparently objected to the idea that McCoy would not know the details of the physiology of one of the Federation's founding members, like he seemed not to in "Journey to Babel."
Yeah, I may have conflated what I was told with my own thoughts on the matter.At the time Journey to Babel was made, the Vulcans would not have been one of the Federation's founding members. The idea didn't start floating around tie-in material until the late 80s or the 90s and wasn't made canonical until the Enterprise episode Zero Hour in 2004.
I suspect that if Kelley did indeed have any objections on the matter it's that as Spock was the ships first officer and a friend, McCoy would likely have been studying Vulcan physiology.
McCoy and the EMH could be annoyingly overbearing but probably not too bad; the only one I would want to avoid would be Phlox because he might decide my problem was genetic and thus refuse to treat it.
I wouldn't put it past Phlox to throw a Ceti eel on an injury if he thought it had some kind of medicinal value.
PHLOX: It'll be okay, as long as it doesn't go into your ear or nose--we may have a problem then, but I should be able to catch him before he gets that far--hopefully.
It goes back further than that. It was in the FASA RPG in the early 80s, and they based their history on the Spaceflight Chronology from 1979, so it was probably in there before that.At the time Journey to Babel was made, the Vulcans would not have been one of the Federation's founding members. The idea didn't start floating around tie-in material until the late 80s or the 90s
This actually ties in nicely to ENT's Klingon arc - if medical meddling caused a plague and made the survivors lose their precious lobster foreheads, it makes sense they would have a cultural aversion to getting a check-up.The Klingons can conquer whole worlds and defeat their gods, but don't you dare take out a hypodermic needle...
But Starfleet has used hyposprays for two centuries now
They don't care, doctors are icky. They'd much rather die in battle than get a flu shot.
Well, it probably wasn't around at the time Journey to Babel was made, so I still stand by my post.It goes back further than that. It was in the FASA RPG in the early 80s, and they based their history on the Spaceflight Chronology from 1979, so it was probably in there before that.
This actually ties in nicely to ENT's Klingon arc - if medical meddling caused a plague and made the survivors lose their precious lobster foreheads, it makes sense they would have a cultural aversion to getting a check-up.![]()
It's part of my head canon that the experience of "Journey to Babel" convinced Dr. McCoy to get a Vulcan specialist on board, so something like that wouldn't happen again. Hence, Dr. M'Benga in "A Private Little War."Kelley apparently objected to the idea that McCoy would not know the details of the physiology of one of the Federation's founding members, like he seemed not to in "Journey to Babel."
Yeah, I suppose TUC's "Jim, I don't even know the anatomy!" doesn't jibe too well with McCoy being able to identify the Klingon spy by organ placement in "The Trouble With Tribbles." I guess he meant that while he knew the basics, he didn't know nearly enough to do trauma surgery on a Klingon.Not knowing the Klingons makes marginally more sense, as they're a hostile power and one would think they wouldn't be too keen on letting the enemy get their hands on bodies from which they could learn weaknesses or develop biological weapons.
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