I will comment on a couple of your points if you don't mind.
3) My visual acuity has dramatically decreased after my post-sophomore fellowship year.
Ouch, sorry.
4) Technological changes, particularly molecular biology and genetics are going to have a major real-time impact on the field. This will probably be both exciting and trying to people young in there pathology careers.
These will have major impacts on the field, but pathologists will control all these areas. And, just like immunohistochemistry these will tests will be used as add-ons in surg path for a long long time.
5) Consolidation of pathologists into specialized consultation firms (check out the IMPATH website, a Fortune fastest grower) and telepathology will decrease the net number of pathologists which may off-set the retiring pathologist prediction. (A company called uropath allegedly handles 30% of all prostate biopsies!)
It is happening but these companies cannot provide the customer support that having your local path group can provide. And, a hospital also has to have pathologists to oversee labs, blood bank and such. This is not only happening to path, but rads as well.
6) Difficulty separating fact from fiction in regard to future job opportunities. Residency programs are desperate for American Grads. But to search various job-hunt sites, virtually no jobs are posted for pathologists (compare this to anesthesiologist listings!)
It is tough to find path jobs on-line the only site that really has them is the College of American Pathology site which requires membership to access the area. Most jobs are found by word of mouth and networking. There will never be as many Path jobs as anest. the anest workforce outnumbers path probably 10 to 1 if you count CRNAs as well.
--These "cons" are all secondary to my biggest "pro": looking into a microscope and seeing the beautiful patterns that tell the story of how this tissue has been used when it was still a piece of a living breathing human.
This is a great pro. I always feel like I have a grand puzzle before me with each case sometimes with very little clinical info to go on, I can give definative answers to clicians most of the time. And, like she said make sure you like it no job is worth doing for 30 years if you will not be happy.
And, just for another tidbit the number of US applicants has doubled at my program this year. I don't know exactly what that means for the big picture. But, interesting.