I hope the part of the article cited by PM News
in CNN's Money magazine was not the view of the
APMA or Dr. Cristina. The article plugged our
profession for only minor problems and chronic
conditions "like hammertoes." The article
plugged orthopedics for fractures and injuries
when helping the reader decide who they should
choose for their foot and ankle care.
I pray that the last paragraph in that article
was the opinion and viewpoint of the author, not
Dr. Cristina. Even so, it's sad that even after
an interview with an APMA representative, the
article's author is so under-informed about our
profession.
I hope the APMA, seeing their name in this
article, forces a retraction to clear up the
orthopedist comment or they might just lose APMA
membership of many more of us podiatrists who
regularly perform surgery on "breaks" and
injuries and completed far better dedicated foot
and ankle residency and fellowship-training than
orthopedics.
Losing ACFAS, strike one; if this article was
sanctioned by the APMA, strike two; my
advice...quit swinging.
PS: I understand that sometimes things are
printed and editorialized without the knowledge
or consent of those interviewed in the article
and will give the APMA some benefit of the doubt
but no forgiveness if a retraction statement
isn't forth coming.
Randall Brower, DPM, Avondale, AZ,
footdoctor33@yahoo.com