- Joined
- Nov 5, 2011
- Messages
- 299
- Reaction score
- 122
Step 1: 226
Hello,
Right off the bat, my IMG status and low step 1 score place me in the category of "undesirable" in this field. However, here is why I would make a great ophthalmologist: I love the field (medicine & surgery, lifestyle, complexity, all the cool tools, intimacy and entrustment with the patient), I love research and I have a year's worth of previous experience in the field (50 hrs/week). I randomly wound up working for a self-employed ophthalmologist in the New York area, the year before I started M1. I quickly became the senior assistant, and an asset to the clinic. I got to witness most of what comes with the general field (cataract surgeries w/ iStent, SLTs, LPIs, pterygiums, glaucomas, Avastin, FOCAL & PRP, angiography, papillomas, chalazions), and performed many functions myself (e.g., visual acuity test, IOL Master, Visual field test, B-scan, pachymetry, Perkins & Tonopen, OCT, fundus photography), seeing around 30 patients a day on average. I know what needs to go in the patient chart, the common diagnoses, treatments, imaging interpretations, and even the billing codes.
My publications include an abstract, and a paper on a retrospective study (vascular), and two neuroscience papers (where I performed in vivo surgeries and recordings).
I have a scholarship that covers about 1/4 to 1/3 of my tuition.
My situation is that my wife and I have two little boys under the age of 2, and she is also in medical school (same year as me) and we would like to be in the same general area (will possibly do couples match).
I believe that my previous employer will vouch for me to residency directors if I only ask.
My question is, should I even bother or should I be realistic and become a great internist?
Hello,
Right off the bat, my IMG status and low step 1 score place me in the category of "undesirable" in this field. However, here is why I would make a great ophthalmologist: I love the field (medicine & surgery, lifestyle, complexity, all the cool tools, intimacy and entrustment with the patient), I love research and I have a year's worth of previous experience in the field (50 hrs/week). I randomly wound up working for a self-employed ophthalmologist in the New York area, the year before I started M1. I quickly became the senior assistant, and an asset to the clinic. I got to witness most of what comes with the general field (cataract surgeries w/ iStent, SLTs, LPIs, pterygiums, glaucomas, Avastin, FOCAL & PRP, angiography, papillomas, chalazions), and performed many functions myself (e.g., visual acuity test, IOL Master, Visual field test, B-scan, pachymetry, Perkins & Tonopen, OCT, fundus photography), seeing around 30 patients a day on average. I know what needs to go in the patient chart, the common diagnoses, treatments, imaging interpretations, and even the billing codes.
My publications include an abstract, and a paper on a retrospective study (vascular), and two neuroscience papers (where I performed in vivo surgeries and recordings).
I have a scholarship that covers about 1/4 to 1/3 of my tuition.
My situation is that my wife and I have two little boys under the age of 2, and she is also in medical school (same year as me) and we would like to be in the same general area (will possibly do couples match).
I believe that my previous employer will vouch for me to residency directors if I only ask.
My question is, should I even bother or should I be realistic and become a great internist?