ENTs fall under the category of surgeons, and surgeons - if you didn't already know - are psychopaths.I have spent far more on "fully qualified" ENTs, audiologists, and doctors, and have been far worse treated by them than any less-scientific "tinnitus therapists" or whatnot. Wish I had read this forum beforehand, because I can hardly afford to be spending that money! (Desperation does things to you.) At least the more new-agey therapists spent a bit of time with me and didn't make me feel like crap. I usually got an hour of somewhat greater peace than before. (And I came into all the private ENT appointments with clear notes, politely, and with low expectations - near to onset. These apparent professionals still managed to go even lower and act more dismissively than those low expectations - no Prednisone or ideas offered, of course!)
This isn't me insulting them, I'm being deadly serious; they have to be in order to perform their job.
Do you think you could spend 10 years of your life studying and training, to end up in a career where you have absolutely no time for a personal life?
Do you think you could cut another human's tonsils out of their throat? Or slice pieces of septum out of the inside of their nose?
No?
That's because you're probably not a psychopath. But just think what characteristics a person who could do those things would have to have.
Some traits of a psychopath:
- Amoral.
- Superficially charming and charismatic.
- Unempathetic and callous.
- Pathological liars.
- Impulsive.
- Bullying and abusive (even to those they're close with).
- Have a small range of emotions.
- Self-victimizers.
- Directly blame others for their misfortunes.
- Manipulative.
- Narcissistic and susceptible to superiority complexes.
- Vengeful.
At the end of the day, what you have to realise is, these guys aren't there to sympathise with you, or make you feel better emotionally (that's what therapists do; why therapists aren't surgeons and vice versa). They're problem solvers (like robots), and all they see when they look at you, is a problem that can't be solved, hence the dismissal.
ENTs/surgeons also aren't creative thinkers (if they were they wouldn't be in that line of work; they would be working in research or cinema) which is why they aren't malleable when presented with conflicting information by patients, that challenge tenets they have learnt to be unquestionable from published research and/or training (like micro-suction and syringing being perfectly safe and effective).
So, you've just got to know what you're working with.
Hard truth: ENTs are of pretty much no use to us (at this moment in time).