So I'm currently a PGY3 at a psychiatry program in the Midwest, and doing well resident-wise, along with some research projects. I always was interested in psychiatry but open to other fields, and did have a decent bit of difficulty deciding between psych and neuro (liked the concreteness and knowledge base in Neuro). In intern year, I had some indecision regarding psych while doing inpatient medicine, but it didn't bother me too much.
However, now, for some reason, it's been bothering me a good deal lately. I feel like I'm not really contributing to anything *that* useful with psychiatry and wondering if I should go into a field like EM,surgery, critical care, where I feel like I can more use my knowledge and "do something" and help save lives more directly. It bothers me that in psychiatry, we can prescribe a medication/therapy, have it not work, and that this is not a big deal - just try something else. Patients can miss appointments or not go to follow-up care, and they'd be fine - this isn't true in CC or surgery or some cases of EM. Also my hubris is acting up and I feel like I will "know" more in other fields (e.g. need to understand lab results, read an MRI, or figure out the best abx tx), rather than just having vague ideas of dx that vary provider to provider and purely medication based knowledge . Sure we need to work up other "medical" causes of psychiatric disorder, but this is the exception.
Now, logically, I know that DALY-wise, psychiatry is definitely important. And I definitely see psychiatry vastly improving the quality of life of patients. I'm definitely interested in the field and love the research. I'm also fairly sure that if I switch I will have something to complain about whatever I switch into, and that sometimes the acute cure is not the long-term "cure". But I still am bothered that psychiatry is not as critical to know things (yes you might provide suboptimal care but the immediate dangerousness of this is low, in general). It kills me when half my patients don't show up to clinic ("did they even need me at all?" or "am i even useful to them?"). And I recognize that psychiatry is really not that many hours of training compared to other specialties - which kinda points out that the knowledge base can not truly be that greatly necessary if you don't require as much training time.
I could just not complain and make money, which would be fine except I don't really feel fulfilled by this. I don't mind working hard and definitely could learn more about psychiatry - I just have a hard time seeing the utility. I'm talking with a therapist - but its not really helping. I thinking about this way too much - like 1-2 hours per day and it's in the back of my mind a lot. Not sure where I'm going with this, but did anyone have similar experiences/thoughts and what did you do to get rid of it?
tldr; feel psychiatry is not very helpful to anyone. Advice?
However, now, for some reason, it's been bothering me a good deal lately. I feel like I'm not really contributing to anything *that* useful with psychiatry and wondering if I should go into a field like EM,surgery, critical care, where I feel like I can more use my knowledge and "do something" and help save lives more directly. It bothers me that in psychiatry, we can prescribe a medication/therapy, have it not work, and that this is not a big deal - just try something else. Patients can miss appointments or not go to follow-up care, and they'd be fine - this isn't true in CC or surgery or some cases of EM. Also my hubris is acting up and I feel like I will "know" more in other fields (e.g. need to understand lab results, read an MRI, or figure out the best abx tx), rather than just having vague ideas of dx that vary provider to provider and purely medication based knowledge . Sure we need to work up other "medical" causes of psychiatric disorder, but this is the exception.
Now, logically, I know that DALY-wise, psychiatry is definitely important. And I definitely see psychiatry vastly improving the quality of life of patients. I'm definitely interested in the field and love the research. I'm also fairly sure that if I switch I will have something to complain about whatever I switch into, and that sometimes the acute cure is not the long-term "cure". But I still am bothered that psychiatry is not as critical to know things (yes you might provide suboptimal care but the immediate dangerousness of this is low, in general). It kills me when half my patients don't show up to clinic ("did they even need me at all?" or "am i even useful to them?"). And I recognize that psychiatry is really not that many hours of training compared to other specialties - which kinda points out that the knowledge base can not truly be that greatly necessary if you don't require as much training time.
I could just not complain and make money, which would be fine except I don't really feel fulfilled by this. I don't mind working hard and definitely could learn more about psychiatry - I just have a hard time seeing the utility. I'm talking with a therapist - but its not really helping. I thinking about this way too much - like 1-2 hours per day and it's in the back of my mind a lot. Not sure where I'm going with this, but did anyone have similar experiences/thoughts and what did you do to get rid of it?
tldr; feel psychiatry is not very helpful to anyone. Advice?