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Was wondering if any practicing sleep medicine physicians could comment on job satisfaction. I've heard from some that sleep medicine is repetitive and boring.
Have to tell people some times you reporting them to the state to not drive or that they can't drive until XYZ. If a hospital affiliated job, they will likely have a DME too, and if they aren't a good DME, you'll have headaches navigating those politics. Don't have a CBTi therapist to refer to or one in the department, there's a headache. Previous sleep doc or primary care punts are all on ambien and benzos, got possible clean up duty on your hands. If your base specialty is XYZ and you see a patient come to you who has significant care from XYZ specialty, you'll struggle with biting your tongue when you see management that isn't ideal.
My job satisfaction is extremely high. There is zero chance that I would change to another specialty in clinical medicine. Even neuroradiology, which I guess would be my number 2 job choice. If I changed jobs it would literally be to something other than clinical medicine.
Sleep medicine is "boring and repetitive" in a relative sense. Dermatologists see skin cancer and acne alot. Are they bored? You will be seeing 90-95% of one diagnosis (obstructive sleep apnea) so you had better love, enjoy reading about/studying, and caring for people with that one problem. The other 5-10% tend to be an exotic neurologic mixture of parasomnias, and movements disorders. Or just basic sleep education.
My job satisfaction is extremely high. There is zero chance that I would change to another specialty in clinical medicine. Even neuroradiology, which I guess would be my number 2 job choice. If I changed jobs it would literally be to something other than clinical medicine.
Sleep medicine is "boring and repetitive" in a relative sense. Dermatologists see skin cancer and acne alot. Are they bored? You will be seeing 90-95% of one diagnosis (obstructive sleep apnea) so you had better love, enjoy reading about/studying, and caring for people with that one problem. The other 5-10% tend to be an exotic neurologic mixture of parasomnias, and movements disorders. Or just basic sleep education.