I keep hearing all these horror stories about residency and no free time and blah blah blah. But I know this is a dumb question...but is it really that bad?
I know you work a lot, and have 24 hour shifts and ect, but if you had a shift like that how much time would you have before your next shift?
Does it matter to what residency you go to too? Some might work you harder than others?
I don't know if it's 50% work and 50% studying for if it's all just work-studying...somebody enlighten me please?
I think you don't want to equate long hours with "horror stories". A lot of those hours can be spent doing pretty cool things, learning a lot, and gathering experiences 99.999% of the US population will never get to experience.
24 hours isn't the maximum stretch most current residents have done by any means. The current years rules limited residents to 30 hours in a row (and even then not every program is in strict compliance - I certainly didn't get out earlier than 30 hours in most of those shifts), and a few years earlier that that, there was no limit. Now they will limit interns to 16 hours in a row, which is pretty short by comparison, although it probably means longer stretches of night float at a lot of programs, and probably means the second year residents are going to get hit with the brunt of long houred shifts from here on out.
Under the new rules, you get at least 8-10 hours out of the hospital between shifts. So theoretically you might be on for up to 16 hours and off for as little as 8 each 24 hour day, with a total of up to 80 hours/week averaged over a month. In reality, expect to work on average 6 days a week with some of those days longer than others.
Residency is NOT 50% studying. It's work, with as much studying as you can squeezed in. You will have a number of lecture hours each week, in the form of morning meetings, grand rounds, lunchtime meetings. And you will have periodic tests -- inservice exams, etc. And presentations. But 90% of your time at the hospital during residency will be spent doing work. Patient care, scut, procedures, etc. So at the end of your day, you may still have patients to read up on, presentations to prepare, and may try to squeeze in studying for the in-service exam or Step 3, etc. But this is time on top of the 80 hours/week you are spending at the hospital, unless you are lucky enough to have a lot of down time. So yeah, if you are at a program which averages close to the 80 hour mark/week, and you have a decent amount of "homework" you are doing on top of that, pretty much all you are going to be doing is working and sleeping. For a lot of folks, intern year is like that. It's not necessarily horrible, because the work is kind of cool, the colleagues are kind of cool and in the same boat, and time flies really really fast when you are running 100 MPH all the time from 5am on every day.
And yes, some residencies work you harder than others. Surgery is probably the most time demanding, followed closely by things like IM and OB. Fields like derm, path, psych, rads, EM, neuro, rad onc are going to have much more manageable hours during residency, although some of them are "advanced" programs and require you to do an intern year in IM or surgery first.
But don't get too frightened. Everyone in residency is there because they chose a challenging path, and pretty much everyone knew what they were getting into. It's a lot of hours, but hopefully a lot of it is educational and interesting. There's really no good way to get the training you need to be a physician other than the dive in and spend a lot of hours learning your trade. Makes your outside life hard to maintain. Bills pile up, phone calls go unreturned. But that's still a far cry from horror.