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I would hate to ruin anyone's dedicated hobby, but tell us what you think.
The most crucial issue (effecting the income potential, the autonomy, the leverage with hosp. admin etc.) is the "issue of surplus manpower in pathology"
It should be discussed ad nauseum and then some more. It should be the foremost issue in the mind of every pathologist. It should be raised again and again at every national meeting/ every pathology forum internet or otherwise until a solution is found.
Our speciality has been corroded by beta type pathologists who suffer from an inherent inferiority complex compared to other specialities like surgery and dermatology. The have let the dermatologists, urologists, gastros, hosp admin treat us like "a second grade speciality" too long.
We make the most crucial contribution to patient care viz. diagnosis, but are seldom acknowledged. Most of the time hosp admin lumps us with technicians. Can anything be more demeaning!!!!!
It is time some alphas showed up and started defending the turf and take back our territory.
You cannot silence us (other specialists, hosp. admin, researcher/admin type pseudopathologists, other traitor pathologists etc.........though you are trying your best).
We are going to take back our money, our autonomy, our respect and our hierarchy (at the very top) in hospitals.
And the way to it is through controlling the market supply of pathologists.
Few alphas are better than a legion of betas.
WAKE UP! TAKE CHARGE! DEMAND PATHOLOGY RESIDENCIES BE SLASHED BY ONE THIRD! OTHERWISE BE A SLAVE FOR LIFE...YOUR CHOICE
DO NOT LET "TWISTED" PATHOLOGISTS " IN CONTROL "STEER YOU TO THE WAY OF LOW INCOME/NO RESPECT/NO AUTONOMY!!!!!
Despite the fact that I've argued elsewhere that there are still some good jobs in pathology (which there are), I would also have to agree with most of these arguments. But I also think it is especially important to encourage top med students ("alpha" types) to consider pathology - these are the people who will keep our field strong and respected among other clinicians - rather than discouraging everyone across the board from entering the field. Cutting back on residency slots (although much easier said than done) would promote this by placing pathology residency positions in higher demand and thus more desirable to top med students. In our current state, I believe many good med students don't consider pathology because they don't want to blow all of their past achievements by entering a field with less professional clout.
No one is discouraging anyone.
These are just the facts of how the practice of pathology is on a downward spiral due to surplus numbers.
do you suggest we paint a "rosy picture" and trick these students into entering the field with wrong perceptions.
that would be wrong.
If these students are half as intelligent as you say, a simple internet search would bring up numerous other sites decrying the bad job market (not just this one).
The TRUTH IS A BITTER PILL TO SWALLOW BUT IT SAVES YOU MUCH PAIN LATER ON. MY ADVICE "MAN UP AND FACE THE TRUTH INSTEAD OF BEING A CRY BABY"
WE FACE GREAT CHALLENGES IF WE ARE TO SAVE THE FIELD OF PATHOLOGY, AND FACING THE TRUTH IS THE FIRST STEP.
NO MORE LIES!!!!
I can say from experience that these SDN posts have discouraged several highly intelligent medical students from entering pathology. Many of them ended up pursuing radiology even though they enjoyed pathology more. Perhaps this is a good thing, filtering out people who aren't 100 percent committed to the field. But I would argue that this does more injustice to the field of pathology than good. I believe that posters who inundate this forum with bad job market threads should think twice since in the long run they are doing themselves a disservice by discouraging good students from joining their ranks.
I was nearly discouraged. I hate to brag, but I was one of those high board scores, good grades type of student who could have probably gotten into any field. I love pathology, but these SDN posts were a serious deterrent early on in my process of choosing a career. I recognize the challenges facing pathology and the fact that there is a surplus of pathologists. I'm not sure how posting sob stories on SDN will be in any way constructive to solving that problem. All you are doing is discouraging people like me from entering pathology. Maybe you're ultimate goal is to deter residents from applying and keep the numbers low. You're hallucinating if you believe that posting doomsday stories on SDN will achieve this goal. You'll simply be reducing the average quality of applicants, and therefore damaging the field.
Job market issues in pathology need to be addressed, but be very sensitive about the way you present them on this forum. You're discouraging more good applicants than you might realize.
To Raider, exPCM, and everyone else arguing about the job market.
YOUR THREADS DO NOTHING ON THESE BOARDS. IF YOU ARE SO PASSIONATE ABOUT SLASHING RESIDENCY SPOTS, WHY DON'T YOU TAKE IT TO THE NEXT CAP MEETING????
YOUR POSTS HERE ARE MEANINGLESS. WE ALL AREADY KNOW THAT THE JOB MARKET SUCKS ACCORDING TO YOU THROUGH ALL THESE MEANINGLESS THREADS.
The time investment into getting an MD and doing residency is too great to only letting what you love determine what you do. You can love more than one thing. And some people may be willing to do something they can tolerate if it makes them 3x as much money because they are able to provide a different lifestyle for their spouse and children.
And yet you frown on those going into private practice rather than academics?
I think they are helpful. It is important to walk into the future with "eyes wide open". I think people going into pathology should know the specialty is being splintered by outside entities trying to skim the cream.
To Raider, exPCM, and everyone else arguing about the job market.
YOUR THREADS DO NOTHING ON THESE BOARDS. IF YOU ARE SO PASSIONATE ABOUT SLASHING RESIDENCY SPOTS, WHY DON'T YOU TAKE IT TO THE NEXT CAP MEETING????
YOUR POSTS HERE ARE MEANINGLESS. WE ALL AREADY KNOW THAT THE JOB MARKET SUCKS ACCORDING TO YOU THROUGH ALL THESE MEANINGLESS THREADS.
HAHAIMHO, I wouldn't take any post by expcm too seriously. Said poster gets on nearly every forum and puts up very controversial topics, examples include: list of terminated residents, to controversial posts on the Caribbean and even more controversial posts on general forum and primary care medicine (PCM) forums. I wonder what the purpose of sparking such controversial issues is, especially when one does not make any comments and just lists articles/websites/few words. IMHO, I highly doubt the individual is a practicing physician, because no physician in their right mind has all the time in the world to be posting on the forum as frequently and controversially as he does...
IMHO, I wouldn't take any post by expcm too seriously. Said poster gets on nearly every forum and puts up very controversial topics, examples include: list of terminated residents, to controversial posts on the Caribbean and even more controversial posts on general forum and primary care medicine (PCM) forums. I wonder what the purpose of sparking such controversial issues is, especially when one does not make any comments and just lists articles/websites/few words. IMHO, I highly doubt the individual is a practicing physician, because no physician in their right mind has all the time in the world to be posting on the forum as frequently and controversially as he does...
HAHA
Since you ended up going to a Carribean medical school it is probably safe to assume that you are not the sharpest tool in the shed.
So here is a basic calculation for you:
My rate of posting here at <700 posts in almost 4 years is much less than your rate of >500 posts in about 1 year.
Do you think pathologists are so busy all day and all night that a pathologist would have no time to post?
How does a med student like you have so much time to post that frequently?
I sure didn't waste that kind of time as a med student - I studied a lot and got into AOA (you have to be in the top 1/6 of the class to be eligible: see http://www.alphaomegaalpha.org/Chapters/AlphaTexas/HistoryConstitution.htm) and had excellent scores on all steps of the USMLE. Now as a practicing physician I do some CME on my own time and post information and advice here that I did not know when I was a med student.
Here is my advice for you:
Spend more time studying and less time on SDN.
P.S. As far as controversial topics it appears anything about the Carribean is controversial to you as I sense you are quite defensive about not making the cut for admission at an LCME accredited school http://www.lcme.org/directry.htm
Their threads are meaningless? Dude... those are attendings who have real life experience and are willing to share it with n00bs like you.
Go back to Ross.