Like the title states, if you are a diagnostic radiologist do you ever feel like you're not a medical doctor? If you aren't having patient interaction do you ever feel like you could have just learned a bunch of anatomy and how to read films in graduate school? Do you ever feel like a technician who's just paid well?
I left a well paying medicinal chemistry job (have a masters of science) to go to medical school so that I could take care of people, but I find myself insanely interested in radiology. However, I can envision a scenario in which I'm asked about a health problem by a friend/family member etc. and not know the answer. I know the field is ultra important to patient care in a supporting role, but it lacks prestige of being able to know how to take care of people. I'm early in my third year, but I can tell you that I love meeting patients and interacting with them. It is a difficult thought in my mind, to throw out the possibility of a career without patient interaction.
It's really the only drawback that hasn't made me throw out the entire rest of the deck of possible specialty interests. I'm looking for more meaningful feedback then "just do IR". Yes I understand that IR takes care of patients. If I did radiology, I'm certainly more interested in reading than procedures at this point. I know a lot of it probably has to do with work satisfaction and the prestige of being a "doctor" will wear off. I'm trying to find what specialty will give me that life long work satisfaction. I'd really like some insight into how you deal with being ancillary, and if you deal with this fact, and please no immature sarcasm.
I left a well paying medicinal chemistry job (have a masters of science) to go to medical school so that I could take care of people, but I find myself insanely interested in radiology. However, I can envision a scenario in which I'm asked about a health problem by a friend/family member etc. and not know the answer. I know the field is ultra important to patient care in a supporting role, but it lacks prestige of being able to know how to take care of people. I'm early in my third year, but I can tell you that I love meeting patients and interacting with them. It is a difficult thought in my mind, to throw out the possibility of a career without patient interaction.
It's really the only drawback that hasn't made me throw out the entire rest of the deck of possible specialty interests. I'm looking for more meaningful feedback then "just do IR". Yes I understand that IR takes care of patients. If I did radiology, I'm certainly more interested in reading than procedures at this point. I know a lot of it probably has to do with work satisfaction and the prestige of being a "doctor" will wear off. I'm trying to find what specialty will give me that life long work satisfaction. I'd really like some insight into how you deal with being ancillary, and if you deal with this fact, and please no immature sarcasm.