You always bring such perspective
While I appreciate the spirit of your post, and there is a lot of wisdom in it, I would like to add some food for thought?
One thing the FOGs have that the FNGs are yet to master is the gut feeling of what is truly an emergency and what is not. Consider when you get irate is it because he/she isn't wanting to use all this new-fangled stuff that you feel is so very very, VERY essential?
Nobody knows more than I there is a disconnect between old fasioned examination and the new quantitative gadgets. In fact I write papers on it.
Many of the new fangled gadgets just add a quantitative number to make finding and interpreting results easier.
Basically, try to make up for skill with technology. But as all The FOGs know, that simply doesn't work.
The intent was noble, the idea to raise the minimum level of care in order not to miss subtle signs or sometimes add signs where before there were only assumptions.
But somewhere, something went wrong and people tried to start substituting technology for assumptions based on knowledge. The problem is the knowledge is no longer taught and then when the numbers don't meet the criteria people simply don't know to anticipate or what to do. Which means your patient must get sicker before they get help and that is a losing strategy in much of medicine. (especially in tissue that once gone is gone forever)
They also know what does and does not kill people in the short term, and how, under most circumstances, it is the luck of the draw and things way beyond anyone's control that saves them. Perhaps they understand better than you how to set a pace that will allow the patient to get to a hospital absent of further harm.
Fixed it for you.
I agree with a lot of this too, but would point out that many of the dinosaurs don't know how to set people up for success either. We cannot control who lives, dies or gets better, but we can position them for the best chance.
There is a benefit to changing position over leaving somebody how they are, even if that sometimes means forgoing an indicated treatment based on quantitative assessment or protocol.
Sometimes it is not what you do, but what you don't and a lot of FOGs figured that out with tears. It is important to learn from their mistakes and make your own new ones, not simply repeat the same.
Temper your judgments against the POSSIBILITY that the FOG is able to "tune-in" to the person's actual cry for help above and beyond the protocol you've been taught.
The very purpose of medicine is to help people, not treat diseases. They are not one in the same.
The main difference between a doctor and a scientist is a doctor uses science to help people, a scientist explores science which may or may not help people in a tangible way at the given moment.
As I have heard and repeat ad naseum, "Many people will have medical degrees, few will ever be doctors."
But that is also true of paramedics. Throughout history, the call of "medic!" has been a call for help. Not always a call for medical aid.
There's also something to be said for the fact that most real FOGs look back to the times they were FNGs and realize that the science of their youth has betrayed them; that what they used with all the certainty of the world has since been debunked. Could it be they understand you, too, may very well be betrayed 10 years from now?
I will be sorely disappointed if it does not betray me.
But I think this statement exactly shows a good dinosaur from a bad one. A good provider, no matter the title, engages in life long learning and improvement. A poor provider sets out to master the technique of today. In a few years inevitably they will succeed. BUt at that point they must decide to stay where they are at or do it again. Sadly sometimes FOGs for many reasons accept they have peaked. From then on, they become less and less relavent as the world stops for no man living or dead.
I would say the trick is to be the FOG and not the dinosaur.
Perhaps, just perhaps, they're challenging you to think for yourself, like harsh experience has taught them they must.
I have encountered such creatures, and my abilities and career are better for it. However I have also seen some who challenge in order to stall progress. The real trick is to benefit from both but only respect the former.
Remember, you are the one who leans more on the books while they are the ones who have pitted the words against reality.
But those books change, and the value of what is taught by books is not to be underestimated. But as both the old and new must realize, we don't all have the same experiences, and therefore the same insights. FOGs who have been away from the books for a while actually benefit from the FNGs professing what is in them. That maintains the required link between academics and out there on your own. It is probably way more beneficial to continuing education than a refresher course of FOGs for FOGs. For that is a closed loop.
First look at if what is being said may be coming from a place of wisdom and perspective which you have yet to learn.
Once you have considered these things, then you can decide if they are FOS, which, because they are human, sometimes they are!
Or just biased by their own experience?
Just because you haven't experienced something doesn't mean it doesn't exist or ever will.
...and don't forget, very few of you will ever get near to becoming dinosaurs. That's called survival of the fittest.
and recognize the difference between a big fish in a small pond and a great shark in the ocean.
Having said that, I stand by my earlier statement, if the old guy is holding your organization back, it is time to respectfully and in a way he can look back and be proud of, remove him from the role of steering the wheel.