A Story About a Doctor Who Was Never Just a Doctor
Dr. William Ellery Finch had delivered 1,472 babies, diagnosed more strep throats than any throat deserved, and survived the rise and fall of three EMR systems that all promised to “revolutionize” his workflow.
He was a family-practice doctor—respected, loved, relied upon by three generations of farmers, lunch ladies, librarians, and the occasional minor meth-lab casualty. His office smelled faintly of Lysol, printer ink, and decency.
But when the last patient of the day limped out the door and the fluorescents buzzed low overhead, he turned the lock, pulled open the bottom drawer of his file cabinet, and smiled.
Inside wasn’t billing records or sample pads from Pfizer reps.
Inside was a Victorian enema syringe, a chunk of arsenic soap, and a small yellowed tag labeled: “Dr. Abernathy’s Catarrh Snuff, 1871 — Caution: May Contain Mercury.”
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