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Parent died of cancer and for whatever reason I decided to do medicine and didn't look back. I just assumed it was the path for me. Obviously I should have considered other careers but it is too late now.
My life is great when I'm not working so I don't think I'm depressed
If you're considering rads then consider path. It has colors.Rads is on the table because of the complete separation from patient interaction, but I have no idea if I'd be bored looking at grayscale scans all day.
so true, so true hahahhaIf you're considering rads then consider path. It has colors.
Is this a new development? I was under the impression that some pathologists had to do two fellowships or move to an undesirable area due to the lack of jobs in some locations.fantastic job market
Yes. Pathology is a field you can practice for a a long time in and can get easier with experience and age. COVID has finally pushed out the numerous 80+ year olds who have been in the field since the 70s. Probably 3-5x more jobs posted now than there were in 2019. It’s an intellectually demanding speciality with great pay for hours worked and stress level. We need more passionate quality medical students and less autism spectrum disorder misfits who couldn’t cut it in clinical medicine.Is this a new development? I was under the impression that some pathologists had to do two fellowships or move to an undesirable area due to the lack of jobs in some locations.
yeah i am obsessed with pathology. i have been wanting to do it for a long time, and for me it's a dream come true pretty much, as nerdy as it sounds. i truly believe that it is the best specialty out there hahahha. i am in love. i honestly hope more people like me go into the field. definitely planning to mentor med students from my school.Yes. Pathology is a field you can practice for a a long time in and can get easier with experience and age. COVID has finally pushed out the numerous 80+ year olds who have been in the field since the 70s. Probably 3-5x more jobs posted now than there were in 2019. It’s an intellectually demanding speciality with great pay for hours worked and stress level. We need more passionate quality medical students and less autism spectrum disorder misfits who couldn’t cut it in clinical medicine.
This one time... in peds camp... I was sitting on a zoom call between a nephrologist and a pathologist. I enjoyed it. It was very cerebral. 100% recommend!
Yeah...Was it about glomerular diseases??
Ah interesting. What about places like quest and labcorp though? Would that worry you at all or are they alright places to work tooYes. Pathology is a field you can practice for a a long time in and can get easier with experience and age. COVID has finally pushed out the numerous 80+ year olds who have been in the field since the 70s. Probably 3-5x more jobs posted now than there were in 2019. It’s an intellectually demanding speciality with great pay for hours worked and stress level. We need more passionate quality medical students and less autism spectrum disorder misfits who couldn’t cut it in clinical medicine.
Don't try it!Ophtho. It’ll give you the high ground.
Pathology was the first medical field to go corporate, largely because the high cost of lab equipment, relatively non-emergent nature of the specialty and ability to ship materials allowed places like quest and labcorp to move in. Everything in medicine is becoming corporate now, you can really only escape it with niche cash only type stuff like cosmetic derm. Am I worried? No. They still need us to slap glass and by the time AI comes in and gets FDA approved, we will all be long retired and we won’t be the only ones replaced. As a matter of fact, no one wants this turf and we’re likely the least of all specialties susceptible to midlevel encroachment.Ah interesting. What about places like quest and labcorp though? Would that worry you at all or are they alright places to work too
yeah thats what i love in pathology - there are SO many options to mold your career and change it depending on personal life goals and on what your life is looking like at the moment. I personally think i want to do academics/practice in a big academic hospital for a few years after fellowship (hopefully in one of big places like CO or UT where i'll do some teaching, some practicing), and then we will see. This way i will be able to forgive my student loan (because residency counts as well), and i love teaching. But then - we shall see. pathology is so diverse.Pathology was the first medical field to go corporate, largely because the high cost of lab equipment, relatively non-emergent nature of the specialty and ability to ship materials allowed places like quest and labcorp to move in. Everything in medicine is becoming corporate now, you can really only escape it with niche cash only type stuff like cosmetic derm. Am I worried? No. They still need us to slap glass and by the time AI comes in and gets FDA approved, i’ll be long retired and we won’t be the only ones replaced. As a matter of fact, no one wants this turf and we’re likely the least of all specialties susceptible to midlevel encroachment.
As far as work conditions, quest and labcorp have a certain culture that some people love. Sit in a cubicle or small office 9-5 with coffee, biopsy slides, one line of medical history and no interaction with whoever sent the case. May not even be from the same state. Relatively high pay (350-400k) with big incentives to move the meat. Some of us don’t feel enough like doctors and prefer a hospital gig where you know the surgeon and oncologists. Others like it- no call, no lab crap, no autopsies, no tumor boards, no resection cases or grossing, etc.
Since you appear to have no intrinsic interest in the field, I would suggest a non-clinical career.Unfortunately, I genuinely don't think I enjoy medicine. I figure at this point I just need to choose something with a good balance of lifestyle and pay that I can tolerate.
Anesthesia don't do clinic... anesthesia don't round... anesthesia barely chart... 😆🤣🤣🤣I appreciate your advice. The tricky part for me is while I did enjoy the ophthalmic OR, I did not enjoy clinic, which is still the majority of what they do. I don't know if chasing the enjoyment of cataracts would be sustainable long term if I don't like clinic the other 3-4 days of the week.
Or I could go for something like radiology which doesn't have the highs of the OR for me but also doesn't have the lows of clinic. The problem is by the time I would take a rads elective to figure out whether I could do that for 30 years...it would be too late to start a research year and ophtho would be out of the running by default. So I kind of have to decide now before I even experience radiology.
Get an MBA and do healthcare management or something
Every admin I’ve ever met makes plenty of money regardless of my or anyone else’s lack of respect for them.Clinicians tend to better listen and respect Medical Administrators if they have qualified and worked at the coalface as an Attending Physician themselves. I say this as a clinician who has worked in hospitals and health services with naive Medical Administrators who come in with new ideas without evidently having the clinical knowledge and experience of working the wards and clinics to inform their decisions at the executive level, which can have harmful outcomes on patient care and the medical workforce.
How does one become one of these admins?Every admin I’ve ever met makes plenty of money regardless of my or anyone else’s lack of respect for them.
Don’t know exactly but some universities offer “hospital admin” programs. Notably, all the people I know who attend them are somewhat delusional…How does one become one of these admins?
Probably top med school top residency. Top undergrad probably wouldn’t hurt eitherHow does one become one of these admins?
Get a MHA or MBA with healthcare concentration.How does one become one of these admins?
Some of the people that go into it seem to thrive off that kind of environment lolGet a MHA or MBA with healthcare concentration.
Seems like a nice gig from the outside, but the higher you go the more time you spend looking over your shoulder. Someone always has a knife out for you.
Indeed, and they often turn out to be the worst.Some of the people that go into it seem to thrive off that kind of environment lol
Directors and Administrators tend to attract two types: people who are genuinely good leaders; and, people who like the power and position.Indeed, and they often turn out to be the worst
There are tons of people with MHA degrees making decisions w/o MDs. No cares if doctors respect them (unfortunately).Clinicians tend to better listen and respect Medical Administrators if they have qualified and worked at the coalface as an Attending Physician themselves. I say this as a clinician who has worked in hospitals and health services with naive Medical Administrators who come in with new ideas without evidently having the clinical knowledge and experience of working the wards and clinics to inform their decisions at the executive level, which can have harmful outcomes on patient care and the medical workforce.
Perhaps in pharmaceuticals?Since you appear to have no intrinsic interest in the field, I would suggest a non-clinical career.
If they get an MD and an MBA, do they need to do residency?Get a MHA or MBA with healthcare concentration.
Seems like a nice gig from the outside, but the higher you go the more time you spend looking over your shoulder. Someone always has a knife out for you.
Is this true for admin positions at academic medical centers only? Or also private? Asking because I don't have these.Probably top med school top residency. Top undergrad probably wouldn’t hurt either
I feel like psych should be the absolute last specialty to choose if you want to avoid patient interactionMy friends who were like this ended up in psych or anesthesia
Depends on what they're aiming for. If the goal is to be top dog at a powerhouse medical center then they'll probably need to be a department chair, which means they'll do a residency and then rise through the academic ranks.If they get an MD and an MBA, do they need to do residency?