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I'm at a "high-volume" residency and I can definitely tell which attendings trained at our home institution/other high volume institutions vs which attendings trained at more "cush" institutions. However, you're comparing Columbia with NYU. While Columbia has more of workhorse vibe, NYU is no slouch. NYU is regarded as the best residency program in the NY area. You'll get great training at both, and how you come out of a radiologist will depend a lot more on you than the institution.As the title suggests, I am almost 100% sure I want to do private practice. I was told that the reading speed difference between private practice and academics is only increasing and in order to maximize income and have the best shot at making partner it helps to be a fast reader. I am currently deciding whether to rank NYU vs Columbia #1 in order to meet this goal. From what I gathered NYU has more academic and research prestige in the field of radiology but Columbia residents absolutely read more scans (work a bit longer each day, take more call, have less dedicated research time, a little more pressure to read faster). Other than the large salary benefit Columbia has over NYU because of this, will the extra volume actually make me better for private practice? Or does your residency not really influence your reading speed
Yes the wRVU/total compensation gap is decreasing between academics and PP. PP model may not even exist by the time the OP is an attending...Dealing with level 1 trauma as a resident is very helpful.The difference is decreasing. I actually don’t know any programs where the residents don’t learn to pick up pace on ED coverage.
In the end speed is partially based on training but also largely based on your mentality. Going to a busy program raises the floor of what you can handle, but as others have said it's rare to have a non-busy call shift anywhere these days.
Tell us more about how this works, what program is used, how it fits into the workflow for readouts.NYU has AI education now too where you receive hard cases that you may not otherwise see. For example, so instead of having a whole day filled with arthritis on MSK there will be some cool zebra MSK cases for you to dictate too so you can learn more.
Wonder if it's some sort of NLP that scans the MSK list for requisitions for "tumor" "mass" "recommended by rad" and auto-assigns the case to the resident worklist.Tell us more about how this works, what program is used, how it fits into the workflow for readouts.