Mmm just to be difficult I call semantics, what exactly did Neelix mean by "lavatory"?Voyager had at least 4 (Bride of Chaotica).
But yeah, nice catch

Mmm just to be difficult I call semantics, what exactly did Neelix mean by "lavatory"?Voyager had at least 4 (Bride of Chaotica).
Tell me if you can remember which. How could you tell?Were Remans native to Remus?
I'm sure I watched an early episode of TNG where an extra was in the toilet and walked out onto the bridge.
Were Remans native to Remus?
That's awesome! I always thought the only reference to a bathroom was when Jake Sisko talks about it on his Daddy's special sailing ship.Voyager had at least 4 (Bride of Chaotica).
As if it wasn't on beforeSupernerd mode on:
I couldn't recall, so I checked the transcript.Voyager had at least 4 (Bride of Chaotica).
Four toilets plus three urinals.I couldn't find hard data on how many heads are in a submarine,
I got to admit I never understood this logic? The NX-01 didn't even have a nurse or EMH for the doctor to work with. I would say the crews were big enough that you would at least want a small staff to help take care of medical needs. Wouldn't need to be as big as you would see on the other shows but 1 is a comically unrealistic number.
I got to admit I never understood this logic? The NX-01 didn't even have a nurse or EMH for the doctor to work with. I would say the crews were big enough that you would at least want a small staff to help take care of medical needs. Wouldn't need to be as big as you would see on the other shows but 1 is a comically unrealistic number.
Jason
As a nurse I'm offended reading that! Nursing is a profession and no, a doctor wouldn't do just fine doing a nurse's job, this is a ridiculous statement.I think that is a good question in general for any series. I mean why is Ogawa just a nurse? Shouldn't every person on the Enterprise medical staff be a fully trained doctor? Sure there's a need for a nurse's role, but I'm guessing other doctors would be able to do the job just fine while also being able to act as the person holding the scalpel (or 24th century equivalent).
You would think they'd have a CMO, and Assistant CMO, plus at least 2-5 nurses to assist in surgeries and with minor issues not requiring the CMO's presense. My wife's a nurse and while Trek is much more advanced, she has in her surgery room a doctor, one or two nurses, anesthesia, and a rep from the equipment company there during surgery.I got to admit I never understood this logic? The NX-01 didn't even have a nurse or EMH for the doctor to work with. I would say the crews were big enough that you would at least want a small staff to help take care of medical needs. Wouldn't need to be as big as you would see on the other shows but 1 is a comically unrealistic number.
Jason
Oh no I didn't mean to offend or denigrate nurses! My Mom was a nurse for forty years! It truly is a noble profession, and a hospital would not run at all if it weren't for nurses. I know first-hand they are the ones who make a hospital tick. I still think a doctor would be able to fill a nurse's role quite well after some training, especially since both are medical-oriented professions and both have a vested interest in patient care. I'm just saying that every member of the Enterprise staff should be a fully trained doctor because it would be helpful for diagnoses and crisis situations. I can imagine in real life some doctors have a big ego and act as if nurses are subordinate to them outside of emergencies like you describe, but I would assume such petty workplace dynamics have been mostly smoothed over by the 24th century. It seems like a time where you can be what you want to be, and I can respect that some people want to be nurses and not doctors. That said, I would think that the skills for both positions are so closely related that it would be more helpful if all the medical staff could perform both roles interchangeably depending on the situation. Maybe Ogawa already is trained to perform surgery in a crisis situation?As a nurse I'm offended reading that! Nursing is a profession and no, a doctor wouldn't do just fine doing a nurse's job, this is a ridiculous statement.
Of course tv is largely to blame for that because it often portrays nurses as doctor's assistants who hand them stuff and not much else, it annoys me to no end.
For a real life perspective, if a doctor (outside of an emergency) tells me to get him x and stretches out his hand I roll my eyes, tell them no and do my own work, if they need something they can move their butt and get it themselves. Luckily this is rare except on tv where this is shown to be nursing.
I think that is a good question in general for any series. I mean why is Ogawa just a nurse? Shouldn't every person on the Enterprise medical staff be a fully trained doctor? Sure there's a need for a nurse's role, but I'm guessing other doctors would be able to do the job just fine while also being able to act as the person holding the scalpel (or 24th century equivalent).
That's a good point. I imagine the Enterprise-D as being a ship staffed with specialists, so it could be that Ogawa also has her doctorate, but in nursing. I'm still sort of left wondering what she can do that Beverley Crusher can't (besides being able to do everything at once, which is a reasonable argument). I think a CMO or any M.D. needs a good nurse to be most effective, and that's who Ogawa is to Beverley. She's her "Number One".IMO, it's reasonably likely that all four of the above have doctorates and as far as 'general practice' (treatment of known illnesses and injuries with established cures, promotion of general health and wellbeing) I would bet that Chapel is at least as capable of carrying out treatment as any of the others, and probably more than Dr Sanchez if he (?) is specifically a pathologist.
Where IMO the role of the medical doctor ("physician" or "surgeon") comes in is dealing with the unknown and coming up with new treatments (not that nurses aren't part of this process, they are, but the MDs are leaders in this).
In Enterprise series Captain Archer was picking crewmembers at the time of the Klingon arrival so the first few shows it makes sense plus other ships were get their medical staff ; now for Voyager they medical staff and other crewmembers were killed by the time Voyager got to the Delta area of space.I got to admit I never understood this logic? The NX-01 didn't even have a nurse or EMH for the doctor to work with. I would say the crews were big enough that you would at least want a small staff to help take care of medical needs. Wouldn't need to be as big as you would see on the other shows but 1 is a comically unrealistic number.
Jason
Yeah remember in Caretaker Voyager's chief medical officer was killed along with just about all the staff.
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