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#251 |
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Pastafarian
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#252 | |
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Member
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I think the op's point was that people in IM don't feel the need to do multiple different fellowships to get a job/become more marketable. We all know that the market is better for primary care docs, but it's true that no one after completing residency in IM does multiple fellowships in Cardio and GI or ID plus Rheumatology, etc., but we all know people who did two or three unrelated fellowships in pathology. However; you are correct that's it's not a good analogy in terms of continuing training because our time spent is less since almost all of our fellowships are one year vs two-three for IM. |
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#253 | |
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Junior Member
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#254 | |
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Probably so, but what I'm trying to say is that even though there may be a bunch of those ass/heart docs, they wouldn't be doing so just to get a job. It would be to make more bank, not because of an imbalance in the supply and demand in the primary care job market. Whereas most path grads are doing so simply to be employable, very few [pathologists] do so because of the financial incentive that is gained versus an IM grad going into Cardio/GI. |
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#255 | |
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Senior Member
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Maybe pathology training generally sucks? Bravo to not doing a fellowship by the way. |
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#256 | |
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1K Member
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Yes, I've been saying this for years. |
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#257 | |
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Senior Member
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Surgpath + all its subspecialties. Cytopath (gyn and non-gyn) Autopsy-Adult, pediatric, forensic Clinical Path (training at most programs is a joke aka mini vacation with dismal passing rates): Chemistry Micro Blood Bank Hemepath Immunology Lab Management Toxicology Pathology training is so broad it's not even funny. You are a true jack of all trades master of none. You have PhDs supervising the lab. Why do you need to know anything about chemistry when you have a PhD managing the lab. Even if you didnt have a PhD there, who in the world is going to know anything about chemistry (except the facts you memorized to pass the boards). Do you really think you are going to remember all the facts you studied to pass the CP boards? Plus all the attendings I know, know jack about CP. They took the CP boards 20 years ago and havent used it since unless it had to do something with surgpath (fungal, etc). Talk about a waste of training. 4 months in each area of CP down the tubes. More emphasis should be placed on AP (since that is what will pay the bills AND is more important anyways, for patient care). If you are a graduating resident and spent two years in an AP fellowship, what are you going to remember from CP anyways? I feel like when you come out of path training, you really haven't mastered anything. If anything, master surgpath, cytopath and hemepath. Last edited by KeratinPearls; 04-02-2012 at 03:46 PM. |
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#258 | |
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Boring
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__________________
We live in an amazing, amazing world, and it's wasted on the crappiest generation of spoiled idiots - Louis CK |
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#259 | |
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Senior Member
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All this said, I do think we're seeing a general trend within this thread in that those of us in fellowship that have looked for jobs for next year, most of us have found something, even with our variable areas of practice. |
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#260 | |
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Sound Kapital
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Pretty much you can get credentialed to do any anatomic pathology at a hospital with just an AP residency. You don't need NP fellowship or Cytofellowship to read out NP or Cyto. But maybe we will one day. YOu will need a GI path fellowship to do GI, hemepath to do heme etc.... Path seems to move a little slower than other specialties in some regards (i.e. we were really late in the game to embrace recertification exam, etc,,) so maybe that is what our future holds.
__________________
Pigs get fat. Hogs get slaughtered. |
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#261 |
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Member
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Do you mean an unwritten requirement by private groups when they're deciding who to hire or an actual policy on a national level and something that will affect getting hospital privileges and/or pathologists' reimbursement from insurance? The vast majority of GI is signed out by generalists and even bread-and-butter heme at small-town community places are signed-out by non-heme people all the time. Plus, there's a bunch of non-ACGME accredited GI programs not to mention the fact that it doesn't even have a subspecialty board exam. If that's so, it will take a long time to take effect because you'd have to wait for the tens of thousands of pathologists across the country who are not subspecialty trained in GI and heme yet sign it out every day to retire/expire.
Last edited by atnag; 04-03-2012 at 10:43 AM. |
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#262 |
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Member
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Now that I've officially signed a contract, I'll play.
Estimated CV sent out: 1 (I really wanted to move to a specific location) Total interviews completed: 1 (consisted of phone + in-person interview) Remaining interviews scheduled: None Number ofjob offers: 2.5 (more on this in a minute) Practice setting offered: Government (Total: 3 FPs) Partnership track: N/A Reason for job opening: Retirement of FP that worked there for several years Location: Colorado (my 1st choice) Residency Training: Chicago, AP/CP, 16 total residents Fellowships: Forensic Pathology Board certification: AP/CP certified Statemedical license: Yes I had a standing offer at my current institution, so that accounts for +1. I also spoke with a Chief Medical Examiner from Canada during a recent national meeting about a possible opening in the next year or so which accounts for the +0.5 (I am confident I would have been hired if I stayed persistent). Overall, I must say, this thread sort of stressed me out in the beginning, b/c it seemed like I was the only one in fellowship without a sure-fire plan of where I was headed. Luckily for me, it all worked out in the end. I can only speak for FP, but I do think the job market is definitely tough if you have a very specific area in mind. |
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#263 |
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2011
Posts: 131
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Anyone else with job search info??
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#264 |
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Senior Member
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I think a lot of us current fellows have posted by now. Would be curious to know if there are any current fellows among the readership who do not yet have a job (or additional fellowship) lined up for July.
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#265 |
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Junior Member
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I posted earlier, probably around Nov-Dec, regarding my expreience. I can update my info. I am AP only current dermpath fellow. Board certified in AP with residency (AP/CP) and fellowship at well known institutions. I am an IMG without visa requirement or significant geographical restriction. I started contacting groups in June 2011 for a start date of July 2012. I cold emailed/ called, applied to posted positions and networked at the meetings. In the end, I contacted probably around 130-140 places expressing my interest, over the course of one year. Most of them do not have posted positions at the time of contact.
Interviews: I recieved 9 official invites and probably around 5-6 telephone interviews. I think most of the interviews came in January/ Feb/ March. I attended 5 interviews and recieved 3 official offers. Most of my interviews were in private practice (physician owned groups, hospital employed positions, corporate labs). I recieved two academic interviews, one of them I attended and other I declined after speaking to them on phone. Salary range/ work load: High volume dermpath only positions were in the range of $300K to $380K, these were mostly in corporate labs with workoad of 100 to 150 cases per day. Traditional private groups with a mixture of dermpath + surg path were starting around $250 K with partneship at 2-4 years. Partner salaries were in the range of >400K. Workload and vacation time were great in the private groups as compared to corporate labs. Hospital emplyed positions were in the range of $240 to $300 K with workload of 50-90 cases. Academic salaries were around $160-$180 K. In the end, I accepted an offer from a physician owned dermpath only group in the geographical area of my preference. From my experience, the most important thing for the private groups was communication skills and the ability to get along with the clinicians. Training and diagnostic skills were probably second on the list. |
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#266 | |
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Fellow
Join Date: Aug 2010
Posts: 62
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#267 |
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Fellow
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I also wanted to do a quick update. I took another poll of the fellows at my institution and one neighboring institution, and here are the recent stats...
Out of 15 fellows I spoke to, 12 have found jobs in various areas of the country. Many were very happy with the overall location and position. 3 are still looking for positions. There are another 5 or so that I have not heard back from. But thus far it is not looking that bad. Overall, for those finding jobs it seems like most were able to secure a position in the state or part of the state of his or her choice. there is a true mix among these fellows, most with two fellowship. Most have one year of surgical pathology training and then one additional year in something like Cytopath, Heme, GI, Derm and one molecular. Also, over the past couple of months I have been contacted by two different groups in my area who had unexpected openings and were or are looking for Pathologists. Anyway, this is the latest in my area. I will do another update towards the very end of the academic year. |
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#268 | |
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Fellow
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Out of 18 fellows I spoke to or heard about, 15 have found jobs in various areas of the state and country. Many were very happy with the overall location and position. 3 are still activly looking for positions and 2 others I have not heard about. Overall, for those finding jobs it seems like most were able to secure a position in the state or part of the state of his or her choice. there is a true mix among these fellows, most with two fellowship and a couple with one fellowship. Most with two fellowships did one year of general surgical pathology training and then one additional year in something like Cytopath, Heme, GI, Derm and one with molecular. I don't know of anyone who got a job straight out of training from this area, though my sample group is skewed toward fellows. More updates to come. Pathguy11 |
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#269 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 182
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check out one of the most recent job postings on pathologyoutlines
"Subspecialty certification or experience in hematopathology, neuropathology, or gynecologic pathology would be a competitive advantage" It's not enough to be competent as a pathologist. one has to be "competitive" to get a job. competing with other pathologists for a spot. |
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#270 | |
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Sound Kapital
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#271 | |
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Senior Member
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If subspec organ-focused training is the new norm, perhaps pathology should follow the lead of internal medicine and have 3 years of general/rotating pathology and 2 years of boarded fellowship, like with every IM subspec. Or better yet, divide out the subspecs from the beginning like the surgeries. Plus, pathology is a stupid name for the specialty. It should change its name to tissue diagnostics. |
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#272 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 182
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Then they should say fellowship training is required or desirable.
I don't hear other doctors competing for spots, and having to do a fellowship to get a competitive advantage. Quote:
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#273 | |
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Pastafarian
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/please resume the ranting. |
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#274 | |
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1K Member
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But he is right that there is WAY too much emphasis on hospital autopsy. |
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#275 |
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Senior Member
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#276 |
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Senior Member
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In what program is autopsy supplanting surg path? Residents rotate through ME/coroner offices because they can't get the 50 autopsies required for board elibility. I agree that surg path is where most community pathologists spend their time and earn their money, but the claim that residency puts autopsy ahead of surg path seems unfounded.
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#277 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 182
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Some programs definitely put an emphasis on autopsy, meaning forcing residents to do perfect and pretty dissections, autopsy presentations, not allowing shared autopsies, or way too many autopsy months. By having the residents do physically laborious autopsies, it frees up time for the attendings to do more interesting service work.
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#278 | |
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1K Member
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And none of the residents in my program had trouble getting 50, in fact it was common to have 70-80-90 and so on. |
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#279 | |
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New Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 143
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Last edited by Unty; 05-02-2012 at 04:36 PM. |
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#280 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 182
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90 autopsies?? ridiculous!! it's too bad that no attendings care about those countless hours spent on the autopsy service, autopsy reports, and autopsy presentations. and then they would get angry at me for not knowing my surg path well...
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#281 | |
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Senior Member
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What numbskull is responsible for the 50 autopsy requirement? Why are they so hellbent on trying to preserve that relic of ancient medicine? It basically serves absolutely no purpose in modern times, or at least no purpose worth sacrificing anything else for. Pathology training as a whole seems inconsistent and obsolete in a lot of ways. |
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#282 | |
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New Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 143
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#283 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 182
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yeah I started getting tired of the same theme.
90 y.o. with a history of coronary artery disease and congestive heart failure who developed pneumonia after intubation cases.... whereas other doctors are learning new technologies, I'm busy eviscerating and weighing organs . definitely not what i expected to be spending my time doing in residency.Quote:
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#284 | |
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Senior Member
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You can't be serious. Do you have any contact with the real world? Doctors may not have to compete for really crappy job spots, but any halfway decent job is going to have major competition. And it would take me about 30 seconds to yell down the hallway and find some clinician who did a fellowship to increase their competitive advantage. Even cardiothoracic surgeons do subspecialty fellowships for cripes sakes. You might say, "well, even the crappy pathology jobs get tons of applicants!" That may or may not be true, but in my experience the crappy jobs somehow still do not manage to land stellar pathologists. The degrees of scale are different but it is not THAT different in pathology. Give me a freaking break. There are ways to make your points without sounding like a crazy person, I suggest you try those or you will continue to have people dismiss your opinions. |
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#285 |
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Fellow
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Man you guys are way off topic. This thread is not intended to be a place to debate whether or not Pathology training is adequate, if we do too many autopies, or what the specialty should be called (random comment by the way). Again, this thread was intended to be a place to report jobs for the coming academic year. I might as well just start a new thread since this one has lost all focus.
Pathguy11 |
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#286 | |
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Senior Member
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#287 | |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 11
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I've been on the job search trail since the beginning of the year since my fellowship ends in June. AP/CP with 2 fellowships. Applied to only academic positions that were a good fit with my background. No geographic restriction. No of CV sent out: 10 No of interviews: 7 No of offers: 5 Most places offered a mix of clinical service and academic time that ranged from 50-50, 60-40, 70-30, 75-25 Base salary: $150-180 with no correlation to geographic region or cost of living. Finally accepted a position that was perfect for me in terms of opportunity and potential. I only applied to open positions that were posted on the Internet. No cold calls. My thoughts on the job market: It's not as bad as people make it sound. The 2 places I interviewed but didn't get offers were places where they decided to cancel the job search due to financial troubles. 2 other places I sent my CV to had internal candidates and did not interview any external applicants (heard through the grapevine). My advice to people on the job trail is to keep trying. Your dream job is out there. "You got a dream....you gotta protect it.....If you want something, go get it. Period." Chris Gardner, The Pursuit of Happyness |
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#288 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: East Coast
Posts: 308
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Inpursuit, I'm glad you found what you wanted, but academics is a lot more wide open than private practice. The job market for private practice IS bad, especially for GOOD jobs.
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#289 | |
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Slide Oracle
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Respectfully, if you weren't expecting this during residency, what exactly were you expecting? I would have thought that any rotations in medical school would have clearly displayed what pathology residents do...not trying to be rude; just curious.
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#290 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 182
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which fellowship is the most desirable now in terms of getting a job?
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#291 |
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Member
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Forensics is up there...seriously. It's probably the only field in pathology where there is a nationwide shortage because not enough people go into it.
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#292 |
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Senior Member
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Agree with forensics.
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#293 |
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Pastafarian
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#294 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 182
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#295 |
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Senior Member
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And that's why the job markets are better for those fields (which are among the lowest paying in pathology). Most of you don't want to do them and would rather work in other subspecialties. Let's stay on topic and save our cruddy job market kvetching for other threads. The OP has done a really good job with this thread.
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#296 | |
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Senior Member
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#297 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 182
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Placentas are stressful. So much going on in one slide.
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#298 |
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Fellow
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Hello everyone. Well tonight we had our fellowship banquet and only one month left before I enter the real world of practice. During the "graduation" ceremony the future jobs and/or fellowships were mentioned for each person. I have combined this with the results from other fellows I know at training programs in my area. Here are the totals, take them for what they are. As of June 2, 2012:
52 Fellows from 12 differential fellowship specialty programs are accounted for. 2 Fellows are still unaccounted for (ie. I don't know their plans) Subspecialty fellowships include: General Surgical Pathology (17), Hemepath (9), Cytopath (9), Breast (1), Cancer Biomarkers (2), Dermatopath (3), GI Path (2), GU Path (1), GYN Path (1), Head & Neck Path (1), Molecular (3), Soft Tissue (2), Forensics (1) Out of 52 fellows, 33 are entering the workforce (obtained jobs) = 63.4% Out of 52 fellows, 17 are doing a second fellowship = 32.6% Out of 17 fellows doing a second fellowship, ALL were either General Surgical Pathology fellows entering a second fellowship OR Hemepath fellows who were doing a second year of research. It seemed like most of these people had already planned and/or arranged these 2nd fellowship before entering this academic year. Out of those 33 who found jobs, 13 are staying in the same state = 39.4% Out of those 33 who found jobs, 20 were leaving for another state or country = 60.4% Out of those 20 leaving the state, 1 took a job in Canada and 4 took jobs overseas in their countries of origin Well that's about all I have. Take this information for what it is. As I mentioned in my very first post, I am not trying to paint a positive or negative picture of the job market. Rather I am sharing the experiences of myself and the fellows in my area. It appears from what I can tell that everyone in my area who looked for a job during this past interview season DID find a job. A good portion of people were continuing their training with a 2nd fellowship. A majority of those who found jobs did 2 fellowships. Please continue to share your experiences on this thread. Pathguy11 Last edited by Pathguy11; 06-02-2012 at 09:42 PM. |
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#299 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 182
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were all the 52 fellows you surveyed doing their first fellowship?
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#300 |
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Senior Member
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Very good data, pathguy. Thanks for getting this thread going. For all the karping people do, at least here we have some realy data for a respectable sample size. Between your 52 and some of us other current fellows, bet we have an n close to 100 for the academic year, and it sounds like the overwhelming majority have either a job or another fellowship lined up for next year.
Personally, I know of only 1 current fellow without plans for next year (he's on his second fellowship), and he's the first fellow I've known in 4 years in pathology who didn't have a job or additional fellowship to go by the end of an academic year. |
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Anyone else with job search info??
. definitely not what i expected to be spending my time doing in residency.





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