Have you thought about pursuing a non-clinical career or switching out of medicine completely?

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kcmd

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I'm an MD that switched early on in the game from clinical medicine to pursuing a non-clinical career in health insurance and more recently in entrepreneurship.

As a little bit of background, I was pretty certain by my third year of medical school that clinical medicine was not for me, but had little knowledge/opportunities/support to be able to explore fields outside of medicine.

I loved the preclinical years - physiology, anatomy, pathology (perhaps not biochem so much..:) ) - and was extremely excited to be on the medicine journey.

Then the clinical years hit - and almost immediately I did not resonate with the clinical application of the textbook information. I enjoyed being with patients, but did not get excited by clinical signs, was bored in surgery and thought the quality of life for the residents and consultants/attendees was poor (skipping meals/bathroom breaks, working 12+ days regularly, black bags under their eyes...). Managing stroke patients, palpating enlarged livers, assisting with appendectomies or working my way through overbooked outpatient clinics was not my idea of something I could realistically do for the next 40 years without dying of boredom.

So lo and behold, I graduated med schoool with honours, but the unhappiness, tiredness and frustration mounted quickly. Eight-minute consultations with patients just to adjust their prescriptions had me feeling less-than-fulfilled to say the least (glorified pharmacist comes to mind), and it was frowned upon to spend any longer with patients in clinic or on ward rounds - the team, whether medicine or surgery, just had too many demands to get through each day.

I'm not even going to start with the on-call part - 30-hour shifts, beeper going off non-stop etc. etc. On my first call, I got four hours of accumulated sleep, and was told the next day that that was an 'excellent' call and I should consider myself lucky... again, the quality of life, health implications and just expecting better for my future certainly came to the forefront. Was I doomed to spend the rest of my life like an overworked, non-passionate, zombie-like doctor who thinks four hours of sleep is excellent? I shuddered at the thought.

When looking outside of medicine, any of the 'support' and 'information' available was if you couldn't 'hack' it in medical school or residency (roll eyes), then you could pursue a master in international health, public health, medical management etc. Again, after doing a bit of research, these degrees didn't offer a passionate career that I was hoping medicine would have satisfied.

What surprised me the most was not the paucity of information available on the world wide web for physicians looking to pursue a non-clinical career or quit medicine (there is a bit more information now how many years later), but instead what shocked me was the resistance from other physicians. I couldn't believe the amount of other MD's who made the following statements:

-"You're crazy for leaving medicine, look at all you have invested (time, $$ etc.)!" - My response: Just because you're digging a hole and realize it's in the wrong place does not mean that you need to keep digging! Stop, climb out, and start again. We are not a tree, we can move.

-"You're going to waste over half a decade of training and knowledge, right down the tube!" My response: Just because I am trained as a physician does not mean that my accumulated experience, skills and knowledge will be wasted. These can be applied to a multitude of clinical and non-clinical settings. Think of quality control and management (all those medical notes you write!), time management (getting through a 50-patient day clinic, hypokalemic patient on the ward and consults throughout a regular working day), prioritization, ability to handle (literal) life-and-death situtations with time constraint, incredible skill of absorbing volumes of dense, complex information in a short period of time for practical application... these are all skills that we have as physicians that very few people outside of the clinical arena in the corporate or start-up world have. Talk about an A-grade applicant!

-"You'll never make it. Medicine is the only thing we know." My response: Dude, we've overcome insurmountable odds to make it through pre-med and medical school. We've pulled all-nighters, taken (and passed!) some of the most difficult exams in the world and dealt in life-or-death situtations in the workplace each and everyday. Relax, switching career is not like climbing Mt. Everest during an avalanche - it's just switching career.

I resigned from my clinical position, and my consultant/attending at the time, an incredible rheumatologist and all around gentleman, understood and encouraged me taking time off to "travel and do what I need to do". Then he closed off saying: "You're a great clinician, so I would be happy to be your reference when you return to medicine." I was more than grateful for the understanding and support. As I walked out of the hospital for the last day, it then struck me - he actually expected this to be a 'short break' and then I'll be back in the clinical field. It never occured to him that I would be walking away from clinical medicine permanently!

To make a long story short, I successfully nagivated a place in public health insurance for a few years and quite enjoyed it - developing policies and procedures that impacted thousands of patients at a time was exciting. However, alas and alack, bureaucracy (and politics) is the antithesis of progress and implementation and eventually became very weary.

Now I've recently started my own business, and really enjoying the journey - the ups, downs and wins, big and small, that growing a business from the ground up provides. Again, totally different from clinical medicine and health insurance, but exciting all the same.

What about you?

Have you ever thought that clinical medicine isn't what it has cracked up to be?

Have you wondered if you were meant for a different path in life?

Have you ever wanted to find your true purpose and passion, but you're married to medicine?

Have you thought about a non-clinical career or a total switch in careers - from doctor to chef, fashionista, business owner, finance, author..?

Would love to hear your thoughts and musings! You're definitely not alone! :)

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Ah so it's the burnouts that make all these ridiculous policies and procedures that add nothing of value. That makes a lot of sense.
 
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Ah so it's the burnouts that make all these ridiculous policies and procedures that add nothing of value. That makes a lot of sense.
Hey Psai,

I appreciate your response.

I wouldn't consider myself a burnout - I quit medicine before that happened because I understood that the hours, work environment and boredom was not conducive for a life I wanted to live.

To answer your response, I would recognize that as an MD in the health insurance arena, policies and procedures being made are to enhance patient care. A glaring issue? Think of one MD in a sea awash with non-MD's and non-clinicians who have *no* clue what it's like for the physician on the ground, the **** implementation of policies and hospital bureaucracy that follows.

It's no secret that more MD's are needed in the hospital admin and public health arena to take control of the healthcare situation as they understand it best, instead of b!tching about it from the floor.

Hope you're happy and well enjoying medicine! :)
 
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To answer your response, I would recognize that as an MD in the health insurance arena, policies and procedures being made are to enhance patient care. A glaring issue? Think of one MD in a sea awash with non-MD's and non-clinicians who have *no* clue what it's like for the physician on the ground, the **** implementation of policies and hospital bureaucracy that follows.

Yeah, I'm sure limiting in-network physicians/hospitals, escalating premiums and paying less to physician groups/hospitals for procedures is absolutely improving healthcare! Keep fighting the good fight for the greater good... and also for your stockholders.
 
No one can force you to be loyal to physicians/hospitals/patients just because you have an M.D. You chose the path that you knew would make you happier, and there is nothing wrong with that. If there were more people that made your choice, maybe physician burnout would be less prevalent. Can't say I could ever see myself leaving clinical medicine entirely, but interesting to see a different side.
 
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