Other questions show that they're the ones who aren't paying attention:
In this case I guess the computer wasn't paying attention:
When I get invitations like this I kind of wish I wasn't paying attention:
They often want to know how things progress if patients fail treatments (1st line therapy, 2nd line therapy, etc.). Sometimes the person writing the survey gets confused.
Then there are questions like this:
(For the record, there is absolutely NFW I am going to attempt to manage a patient's diabetes. I'm a neurologist. And any patient who would ask me to manage a non-neurological condition has a death wish).
There are ones I have no clue about:
My favorites are when, after I've slogged through and completed a survey, it asks if I still want to get paid for it.
5 comments:
Great examples of the unused skill of proofreading.
At least you're supposed to actually get money, I keep getting surveys advertising the chance to win 1 of 20 $50 gift cards.
The questions asking if you want to get paid are probably also there to see if you're paying attention.
If you're already past the third line of therapy, does it even really matter at that point what you do next? Why not just let the patient choose whichever is their favorite?
The obvious answer to question 8 is "yes" and described as "This answer has been deleted."
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