Sarcasm is fine...being a snob isn't.
You are right, that was an inappropriate remark and I apologize - I had just finished an extended argument with my 20 some year old daughter and was way too much in the "I'm the daddy" mode. Again sorry
😳
Back to your question Yes, moonlighting can provide some contact with real world medicine and situations but on a very limited basis compared to working as a resident flight doc. In a 2 year stint as a FD you may work with 30-40 different hospitals and EMS agencies, from a true 2 room emergency room to other tertiary care centers. It will give you a tremendously wider view than some limited moonlighting at 1 or 2 community hospitals or riding with your citys ALS rig for a few weeks.
As I stated in one of my previous posts:
I have taken care of tens of thousands ED patients and several thousand prehospital patients. Without a doubt, the most memorable and challenging were on the helicopter.
Experience air vs ground. The bull**** factor is much lower in the air. Its not absent, but it is lower. The helicopter usually sees a distilled acuity. As far as scene responses, the helicopter is typically called to the more severe accidents. In an ALS ground rig you are hauling a lot of minor fender benders and sprained ankles. You may go days without seeing a truly ill patient.
For interfaculty transfers , the sicker pts tend to be sent by air if available.
Bottom line the average helicopter transfer tends to have a much higher acuity compared to your average ground transfer. Higher acuity = more procedures and fun stuff. Thats what us EM types live for. Given the same shift time I see more acute pts in afew days on the helicopter than I saw in 2 months in a ground service.
To make it a worthwhile experience you have to be an actual, dedicated crewmember. Not an observer or ridealong. It is a really great environment to test your wings. For many, it is the first time as a physician that you are taking care of a patient without any backup.
I highly recommend the flight physician experience for all EM residents.