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#1 | |
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Pastafarians Unite!
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 4,964
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Whether or not you should try for psych is a complicated issue. You could point out that because you have a psysh issue, you'd be more able to empathize with patients. However, it can pose problems (transference and counter transference) and some psych programs will likewise be uncomfortable considering you. There's no question that your honesty caused some of this. You could remain mum, simply state that you had a "medical condition" and that it's been "addressed now". Programs may simply decline to interview you if you're that vague, anyway. It's a tough spot, I have no easy answers. If you're at a US medical school, you should use the last 3-4 months wisely, even consider extending medical school by another year. Consider PM&R, Path, and Occ Med as fields -- they have much less call, better sleep, and are less competitive. If you are interested in any of these fields, you need to do some rotations and get some letters for next year. |
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#2 |
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Senior Member
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To add a couple of thoughts --
I would be sure that you're not choosing psychiatry because you believe psychiatrists will be more understanding of your condition, or because you think it will be less competitive, as neither are likely true. Psychiatrists may on the surface understand your condition, but they also understand how impairing it can be, and no one wants to recruit someone who will be impaired during residency. I would make sure you have an aggressive exposure based psychotherapeutic approach to the OCD, and that you have taken on how to do this for yourself in new circumstances. Xanax is IMO contraindicated to that approach. Finally, your best ally will be strong letters of recommendation from faculty that have directly observed you in high stress clinical situations since your condition is under control, and can attest how well you're doing. I emphasize letterS, as in plural. OCD has a different risk than other mental illnesses, and I would methodically plan out what the risks are in doing residency (such as anxiety over a medical test or exam finding, leading to rechecking and getting behind in work), and realistic approaches that you can do and have already demonstrated you can do. Saying "I'll just not do that" doesn't give confidence that you understand the seriousness of your condition. I would plan out a clear therapy strategy for during residency, with multiple redundancy plans.
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There are [at least] 21 paths to the top of the mountain. If someone says he is on THE path, he isn't even on the mountain. --Jack Schwartz |
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#3 | |
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End-Stage Senioritis
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