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I at least had a dermatopathology lecture set in MS2. Granted, I slept through most of it, but it was there.
Funny, we had a rad onc lecture but no dermatopathology.
I at least had a dermatopathology lecture set in MS2. Granted, I slept through most of it, but it was there.
Funny, we had a rad onc lecture but no dermatopathology.
I could suffer through a life of surgery, I could waste far too many hours of my telomeres rounding in IM, but dermatology... I just couldn't. The patient turnover is too fast, the procedures too unrewarding, the work too tedious. If you can do it, good for you, but it's just not a field I could enjoy.
One thing to remember about contemporary dermatology, aside from the MOHS surgeons, is that it's a field with a low barrier to being disrupted by NP/PA's. It's also squarely in the sites of CMS for reimbursement adjustments downwards as procedural dermatology on medical patients has skyrocketed in #'s for no good reason. I say that to emphasize that the financial attraction to the field might not be a durable thing down the road.
I also would go crazy doing do the 50-75+ patient clinic days that many dermatologists (and opthamologists for that matter) do 4-5 days a week to churn the revenue wheel. It's a miserable and soul sucking way to practice.
Hilarious post. You don't have a clue about the realities of medicine.Excellent post. I look forward to seeing midlevels encroach into contemporary dermatology and tilt the pay-scales downwards permanently. Here's my rant: If you're in medicine exclusively for lifestyle, prestige, or monetary compensation you are wasting your time and most likely rendering lower quality patient care relative to your peers. Develop a personality and blah blah blah
As someone who career switched from i-banking to medicine, it bothers me to speak to a quarter of my classmates who have 0 interest in any field other than derm due to lifestyle and salary. /rant sorry for the paragraph of text here.
Excellent post. I look forward to seeing midlevels encroach into contemporary dermatology and tilt the pay-scales downwards permanently. Here's my rant: If you're in medicine exclusively for lifestyle, prestige, or monetary compensation you are wasting your time and most likely rendering lower quality patient care relative to your peers. Develop a personality and find a way to get a 2-3 year capital markets gig out of undergrad at a bulge bracket, elite boutique, or middle market investment bank. Sacrifice your personal life during this period and work your 80-100 hour weeks because you most likely will not have to later on. Shift into venture capital, hedge funds, or private equity and proceed to make much more than a dermatologist over your lifetime. Your rolodex, annual salary, and general business knowledge/acumen will be greater and your net worth will reflect the corresponding changes. As someone who career switched from i-banking to medicine, it bothers me to speak to a quarter of my classmates who have 0 interest in any field other than derm due to lifestyle and salary. /rant sorry for the paragraph of text here.
Hilarious post. You don't have a clue about the realities of medicine.
The naivety of premeds and beginning 1st year med students will never cease to amaze me.
I think OP should change the title of this thread to, "Let's all hate on dermatology." The number of obnoxious comments from people who haven't clearly spent anytime in the field is staggering. There are things that are good and bad about every single field in medicine. No field is better or worse than any other. We all provide a valuable service.
This is such a hilariously idealistic and naive post. And oddly bitter/angry at the same time.
May you never have a seat at the RUC.
Not sure how you got bitter out of that post. Projecting?
I remember having literally a single 1hr lecture for rad onc during our onc block. Derm actually got its own 3 week block, and the derm attendings complained a little bit during the intro lectures that they felt they needed more time. I think the 3 weeks was proportional to how much derm shows up on Step 1 though too, I don't think I've ever seen a question that required knowledge on what rad onc does
Never. Dermatologists and Plastic Surgeons in South Beach are strictly cash basis and filthy rich. yet, their lives are soul-less and their patient demographics are beyond shallow and narcissistic. Difficult specialization especially when they hock personal care products to augment their income
Give me a dirt poor patient who truly needs medical intervention any day over a rich plastic surgery prospective patient, and I would slide my payment scale for the poor while removing any third party payer involvement
Physicians need to take back the physician-patient sacred relationship
Half of you on this thread are Bernie Sanders cultists. Be real with thyself.
M1 here. Both of my parents are physicians (dad is in emergency medicine, mom is ophthalmology), and they are both pushing me into dermatology. They have said that if they could spend the rest of their medical careers doing dermatology, they would do it in a heartbeat. According to them, when I'm older, passion for my field won't be as important, and I'll just be grateful to have a high paying job with good hours so I can spend more time with my family, hence the reason why they want me to go into derm. Right now, I find myself drawn to family medicine (oh, the horror!), but I'm wondering if 30+ years from now, I'll be kicking myself in the butt for not having chosen a residency with better pay and hours, assuming of course, that I have the numbers for derm which is a pretty long shot anyway.
So, I wanted to ask the SDN community, if you could go back in time and switch into a dermatology residency and get that laid-back, cushy lifestyle now, would you?
Thanks,
BT
WhatHalf of you on this thread are Bernie Sanders cultists. Be real with thyself.
I would do Derm if I wasn't doing GI. Actually considered doing derm after my IM residency but too far deep. Both procedural, less patient BS.
Much the same as derm, I think GI has a great future with cash procedures minimally invasive weight loss is the future. Cash procedures for hemorrhoids. Just wait these are growing fields.
I wasn't prepared to put up the fight necessary to match into derm coming straight from undergrad (never took any time off, graduated undergrad in 3 years while working)
I use minimally invasive weight loss now. It's not the future, it's the current. It's called Eat Less and Move More. The ELMM (TM) program works wonders for people. It's not well known because the pharmaceutical companies don't run ads on late night TV for it.
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Il Destriero
Anyone who is trashing derm due to boredom is spending too long with each patient and missing out on the glory that is the 5 minute derm appointment.
M1 here. Both of my parents are physicians (dad is in emergency medicine, mom is ophthalmology), and they are both pushing me into dermatology. They have said that if they could spend the rest of their medical careers doing dermatology, they would do it in a heartbeat. According to them, when I'm older, passion for my field won't be as important, and I'll just be grateful to have a high paying job with good hours so I can spend more time with my family, hence the reason why they want me to go into derm. Right now, I find myself drawn to family medicine (oh, the horror!), but I'm wondering if 30+ years from now, I'll be kicking myself in the butt for not having chosen a residency with better pay and hours, assuming of course, that I have the numbers for derm which is a pretty long shot anyway.
So, I wanted to ask the SDN community, if you could go back in time and switch into a dermatology residency and get that laid-back, cushy lifestyle now, would you?
Thanks,
BT
I don't bash derm especially since my closest mentor was a derm (hence why I was drawn that way). I have been fully integrated in derm for years before even applying to medical school (academic, private practice, wrote 2 book chapters in derm and published 5 papers). For some of us it is just... not exciting. Not gonna lie, I was mostly doing it for the lifestyle but after seeing the same biopsies, cryosurgery, prescribing Accutane and giving Stelara injections...I can honestly say that I will pass. I respect derms to the fullest but the 9-5 days in clinic feels longer than 11 hour days in surgery to me.Anyone who is trashing derm because of boredom needs to realize that most americans are bored with their job but don't have the privelege of working 40 hours a week and making amazing salaries. Also probably the one's talking about the job being boring are probably boring people without much going on besides their job. It's not only about what happens at work (bored or not), but also what happens after work and a lot of other specialties don't have a lot of after work going on.
Maybe this is the the SDN crazy talking, but isn't 3rd year a bit late to decide on a field as competitive as derm? Common wisdom around here would be that you should be doing derm research by the summer between M1 and M2.You're an M1. Think about learning medicine for now. You will see what you like during your third year rotation.
I thought you already had me on ignore when I called you on this last time. Your "pressure between the eyes" line gets very old.
Maybe this is the the SDN crazy talking, but isn't 3rd year a bit late to decide on a field as competitive as derm? Common wisdom around here would be that you should be doing derm research by the summer between M1 and M2.