It is ok to be an imposter.
But even without this, the thing is, when you don't know, you will make mistakes.
And when your job is to take care of people, mistakes hurt them.
It's the nature of things.
Last year I had 3 medical errors, one that almost got me killed, by very well-meaning professionals.
Closing your eyes and pretending it doesn't happen is naive at best.
But people have to start somewhere. They can't stay in theory forever. And no amount of preparation will save you from making terrible mistakes.
Since we can't put an experienced doctor behind every intern 24/7, there is no real solution to this for now.
Same for programming.
Rather than it being the place where a practitioner works? ("someone whose regular work has involved a lot of training")
Individuals can be new to a practice and feel like imposters but we shouldn't be pointing to statistics like this as an example of why it's ok.
I can't believe people think like this.
Even then, the Boeing scandal shows it's not bulletproof.
It's not the same for medicine. There are way more doctors than you can put safety nets. Also, when a plane crashes, it's on the news, it costs money and PR. Much less so with doctors.
The plane industry is not inherently more moral, just more liable. Responsibility in the health industry is way more diluted.
It's not that we WANT to pay the price of people learning. I wish I would not have had the wrong meds given to me last year.
It's just that the system is not currently set up to do it otherwise.
So you can feel guilty and stop moving, and you will not learn. You will not grow. And you will actually hurt people for a longer period because you will still make mistakes.
Or you can own it and accept the inevitable: doing things means having actual consequences on the world.
If you want, you can dedicate your life to change the whole system and make it better. But I don't think anybody in this thread is doing that right now.
I did see a lot of people on their high horses, but doing nothing though, paralyzed because they were looking for a way to never break anything.
Me, for example. For years.
However, normalizing the loss of human life as part of the learning algorithm is psychopathic. There's a time and a place to make mistakes... In mission critical situations that's in training and everywhere else we should aspire for safeguards that prevent the loss of life due to mistakes.
In medicine a lot of these deaths can be prevented through greater care. It's not different than engineering in that respect. The greater problem is decision makers putting profits over life. And this kind of mentality in this thread is just fuel for that kind of behavior. It's gross.