- Joined
- Nov 22, 2015
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It is funny how these people can clime up the career ladder and become PDs/chiefs! I do agree with J DUB above, good things happens to good people. But, realistically they will make your life a hell and might end ones career. I don't know if there is any good advice to give, other than not giving up and going back to work in a grocery store.
In my case, I have had several clashes during the years with powerful people, a recent one with the head of Urology at our hospital (who is an ass, have had several residents fired, several attendings who resigned, if you look up the word jackass/bully in a dictionary you would se his face just next to these words), the only reason I still am around is that my chief of surgery plus several very powerful attendings (head of trauma, UGI, colorectal, and endocrine) has had my back. I do believe their support is partly due to their believes that I'm a good physician but mostly due to the fact that they know I play fair!
How is your relationship with the chief and the other attendings?
I'm in a field that doesn't have those types of chiefs--everyone in their last year is considered a chief. My chair is in the subspecialty I am applying to and I feel like I get along with most everyone in that division, but they're a small part of the department. The PD has turned most of the general attendings against me because of lobbying behind the scenes (verified by multiple sources). I just hate the pit in my stomach every day, especially when you know yet another bitch-out session is coming. Nevermind that my side of any argument/situation is always completely ignored.
I'm convinced that some PDs pick out a "whipping boy" to torture every 1-2 years. Maybe you remind her of some dude that totally screwed her over in undergrad. Who knows. I would think about finishing this year and transferring.
What field are you in?
What I was thinking too.........Sounds like surgical.