Interested in dermatology but also very interested in global health. I’m wondering if it’s possible to combine both options?

This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.

Lovedermsomuch

New Member
Joined
Feb 29, 2020
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
I am really interested in working with vulnerable populations and I am also interested in derm and I was wondering if a career in derm would allow me to work with vulnerable populations and do global health work.

Members don't see this ad.
 
I am really interested in working with vulnerable populations and I am also interested in derm and I was wondering if a career in derm would allow me to work with vulnerable populations and do global health work.

Yes, I would think almost any career in medicine would allow you to work with a vulnerable patient population and do global health work
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 user
Yes, I would think almost any career in medicine would allow you to work with a vulnerable patient population and do global health work
Are you sure about that? Because whenever I tell people my interest in working with vulnerable populations and derm they tell that’s not what usually happen with derm?
 
Members don't see this ad :)
I am really interested in working with vulnerable populations and I am also interested in derm and I was wondering if a career in derm would allow me to work with vulnerable populations and do global health work.
You can always not charge the uninsured if you like charity. And rich people can afford to travel elsewhere and give away care or train local health teams
 
Are you sure about that? Because whenever I tell people my interest in working with vulnerable populations and derm they tell that’s not what usually happen with derm?

Yes, that is usually not what happens.

Med students claim all the time they'd love to work with a vulnerable population, or stay in academics and teach, or do research and further the field.

Most of us (I'm included in this group) end up pursuing a private practice position upon completing residency. (Yes, I know you can still work with a vulnerable patient population or teach or do research and further the field in private practice. But I find the passion for those things are significantly muted after someone has completed a derm residency as compared to when someone is angling to get into a derm residency)

So when I was in academics, I learned to take those sorts of statements with a grain of salt.

I liked applicants because I thought they demonstrated a genuine interest in derm. I liked applicants because they appeared to one day be good residents. I liked applicants because they seemed like someone interesting to be around for 3 years.

Simply claiming that you want to work with a vulnerable patient population or wanted to do global health work did not give a person a leg up on the other applicants (at least in my eyes)
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 users
I found working with underserved patients is all well and good until you have student loans, a family, and a sizable patient population that doesn’t appreciate your care. I’m not raining on your parade, if that’s what you love, all the power to you. But at the end of the day, for most people, it’s a job
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 user
I am really interested in working with vulnerable populations and I am also interested in derm and I was wondering if a career in derm would allow me to work with vulnerable populations and do global health work.

Yes. There’s lot of dermatologists interested in global health. The AAD even has an expert resource group on global health dermatology (I believe it’s called GloDerm). Esther Freeman (Harvard), Toby Maurer (UCSF), and Carrie Kovarik (UPenn) are some examples of academic dermatologists who do a lot of global health work. It can be done. It’s more up to you and your own ambition. I know a fair number of residents who’ve pursued fogarty fellowships after residency to pursue this.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 3 users
Yes. There’s lot of dermatologists interested in global health. The AAD even has an expert resource group on global health dermatology (I believe it’s called GloDerm). Esther Freeman (Harvard), Toby Maurer (UCSF), and Carrie Kovarik (UPenn) are some examples of academic dermatologists who do a lot of global health work. It can be done. It’s more up to you and your own ambition. I know a fair number of residents who’ve pursued fogarty fellowships after residency to pursue this.

Yeah the AAD has a few global health electives you can do. The Botswana one gets rave reviews. People also set up their own electives through their institution's global health initiatives which most larger GME departments have.
 
Top