I'm an anesthesia resident and have been enjoying my choice even more than I expected. Thought I'd share why...
- The care is acute. (Most of) The drugs you use have an immediate effect. The patients tend to misbehave in acute ways. You have to make quick decisions. It makes for an adrenaline-filled day.
- You get to physically take care of patients. Lots of doctors order drugs, but have no idea how to administer them. You give the patient drugs without orders and see the consequences. You are also an expert at placing difficult lines and doing procedures that help with figuring out physiology as well as treating pain.
- You're an expert in physiology, and I find it fun understanding why bodies do what they do. Knowing a lot about drugs and catching side effects, or using a drug for its side effect is fun.
- Anesthesiologists tend to me nice, laid back, fun co-workers. Although you do need to work with surgeons.
- You tend to work with nurses one-on-one more, and therefore we're not usually hated by the nurses. In fact, I'm friends with lots of them. You'll find that in a lot of specialties there's big time nurse vs doctor fights (although we do have some midlevel provider nurse vs doctor animosity).
- There's a variety of stuff to do, and if you're in an academic center, your days can be very different from the last. You could be doing cardiac, peds, ortho, neuro, urology, burns. You could be off the floor doing MRI/ECT. You could be running the OB floor and doing epidurals + c-sections. We block peripheral nerves outside the OR in preparation for the OR or to treat trauma such as rib fractures. You get called to codes and deal with traumas. Etc.
- If academic center is not your thing, and you like boring days, you could go work out in the community doing healthy patients for elective procedures. Or, you could retire into this.
- Although you don't have much chronic interaction with patients, you do usually have several hour interaction with patients. So you spend more time in an average visit with someone than other docs, and you can get to know them pretty well. The time you spend with them is critical, and it's great calming down someone right before they're about to have a major procedure.
- If someone is dying on the streets, you know what to do. You're an expert at ressuscitation.
- Well paid
- Good hours
- The residency is benign compared to many others
- Specialty condusive to having a family
There's probably a lot more that I can't think of right now too.
- The care is acute. (Most of) The drugs you use have an immediate effect. The patients tend to misbehave in acute ways. You have to make quick decisions. It makes for an adrenaline-filled day.
- You get to physically take care of patients. Lots of doctors order drugs, but have no idea how to administer them. You give the patient drugs without orders and see the consequences. You are also an expert at placing difficult lines and doing procedures that help with figuring out physiology as well as treating pain.
- You're an expert in physiology, and I find it fun understanding why bodies do what they do. Knowing a lot about drugs and catching side effects, or using a drug for its side effect is fun.
- Anesthesiologists tend to me nice, laid back, fun co-workers. Although you do need to work with surgeons.
- You tend to work with nurses one-on-one more, and therefore we're not usually hated by the nurses. In fact, I'm friends with lots of them. You'll find that in a lot of specialties there's big time nurse vs doctor fights (although we do have some midlevel provider nurse vs doctor animosity).
- There's a variety of stuff to do, and if you're in an academic center, your days can be very different from the last. You could be doing cardiac, peds, ortho, neuro, urology, burns. You could be off the floor doing MRI/ECT. You could be running the OB floor and doing epidurals + c-sections. We block peripheral nerves outside the OR in preparation for the OR or to treat trauma such as rib fractures. You get called to codes and deal with traumas. Etc.
- If academic center is not your thing, and you like boring days, you could go work out in the community doing healthy patients for elective procedures. Or, you could retire into this.
- Although you don't have much chronic interaction with patients, you do usually have several hour interaction with patients. So you spend more time in an average visit with someone than other docs, and you can get to know them pretty well. The time you spend with them is critical, and it's great calming down someone right before they're about to have a major procedure.
- If someone is dying on the streets, you know what to do. You're an expert at ressuscitation.
- Well paid
- Good hours
- The residency is benign compared to many others
- Specialty condusive to having a family
There's probably a lot more that I can't think of right now too.