I apologize if this has been asked a hundred times before, but does anyone have some advice concerning what MS-1s should be doing at this point if they're thinking orthopaedic surgery?
Tip #1: Pick something non surgical
Tip #2: Pick something that ends in -ology (Cardiology, Dermatology, Anesthesiology)
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In all seriousness, I think that most surgical programs (speaking from a general surgery standpoint but it probably applies to Ortho) are looking for people who are hardworking and willing to put in the effort & make the sacrifice.
Grades and board scores are important but what seems to really matter is how you function as part of the team. Do you show up early? Stay late? Are you confident and have a desire to push harder to learn more?
You need to be aggressive without being overbearing. Upper year residents want to know that they can trust you...trust your assessment of a patient in the ER, trust your post-op check late at night, trust that in the middle of the night they have enough confidence in you that they know when they need to get out of bed or when something can wait until morning.
Work hard, do well in school, do well on the boards and get to know people early. Establish connections starting in first year.
But more importantly, KEEP AN OPEN MIND. You never know what you will find in medical school that will change your mind or turn you on to a totally different field. My residency director says that some of his best residents have been people who would make great internists first.
At least with Gen Surg you need to know your medicine first...I am sure with Ortho as well you make a far better surgeon if you are a well rounded physician, not just a "technician" as some people view cutters.
Good luck.