whats the lifestyle of a vascular surgeon like ? much call?
Vascular lifestyle is one of the least friendly (up there with CT, Trauma and Txp).
Really? CT I expected, but transplant and trauma? Yikes.
Not to hijack the thread...
But can a transplant surgeon split his/her time up between an Immuno lab and patient care?
Is it possible to do both without sacrificing aptitude? I would think that this would be quite a concern...
Thanks in advance.
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But can a transplant surgeon split his/her time up between an Immuno lab and patient care?
Is it possible to do both without sacrificing aptitude? I would think that this would be quite a concern...
Really? Yes. I suggest you do a search on lifestyle and you'll find several threads here because these are definitely lifestyle unfriendly specialties.
Transplant is particularly unfriendly because of the unpredictability of the work. You never know when an organ will be available and most of the time when it is, its the middle of the night for cadaveric transplants. Obviously living related and unrelated donor transplants are scheduled procedures but there are still a lot of cadaverics which are transplanted. These organs become available, often after a trauma, usually in the late evening or middle of the night. There is a time pressure for limiting ischemia so you must obtain the organ and transplant it in a relatively short period of time...no waiting until the morning. Transplant surgeons often do other emergent procedures on their patients..."once a transplant patient, always a transplant patient" seems to be the motto. In my experience and that of others, EDs and other physicians will not touch a transplant patient, even if their problem is not transplant related. Expect to be in the ED readmitting your patients and dealing with their hernias, appendixes, etc.
You could decide only to do living transplants, but then you remove a decent size category of available organs and in some patients, these are the only possible organs for them. Thus, you must make a decision whether or not to work hard for your patients.
While in some places Trauma is shift work, I must remind those considering it, that as an attending, shift work doesn't necessarily mean you go home at the end of your shift. For example, my ex is a trauma surgeon...he is on call for Trauma 0700-0700, but he doesn't go home at 0700, he either has a day full in his office, or with scheduled OR cases, or finishing cases from the night on trauma. And of course, he still has to round on patients. In places which get enough Trauma to have a staff surgeon, you take in house call or must live within a very short distance. When you are on call you are busy and as I noted above, you don't go home after your call is over and sign out to the next guy...you finish the work, whatever it is.
Trauma, like Transplant is unpredictable, and the patients, just like Transplant patients, can be difficult and have a lot of social problems. You spend a lot of time babysitting Ortho and Neurosurg patients that you don't even get to operate on. When the social worker can't find placement for your homeless man or transportation back to Mexico for the visiting alien, they sit on your service and you round on them everyday.
At any rate, there are many threads here which will regale you with stories of the lack of lifestyle in CT, Transplant, Trauma and Vascular. Sorry...🙁
Thanks for the response KC...
What I meant to say was that I expected the lifestyle of vascular to be as bad as CT (bad), but I didn't think it was as bad as trauma or transplant (very bad).
Vascular call is painful...the patients are sick, you have to come in, the operations can be long and are often emergencies (so they can't be put off until the am).
Vascular lifestyle is one of the least friendly (up there with CT, Trauma and Txp). However, if you just do veins and the like (as many do before retiring) you can avoid the drawbacks above.
whats the lifestyle of a vascular surgeon like ? much call?
Kim Cox has had a metamorphasis into a Simpson.
Whatcha think? I'm making all the Admins do it (Lee and Dr. Mom are still holding out)!😀
Who's drawing all these Simpsonesque avatars?
HI..I matched in to one of the integrated vascular surgery programs and it is awesome. One aspect that may pre-surgery applicants are unaware of is how much endovascular there is in vascular surgery today.
I get a mix of open procedures, imaging, vascular medicine, etc, etc.
Lifestyle has much improved (in my humble opinion) because there are so many more endo cases (ruptured aortas can now be treated endovascularly and rarely even go to the ICU). There is a great mix. But I am really inpatient and like short cases too (there are plenty in vascular: SO many diagnostic angios, stents,IVC fiters angioplasties, fistulas/dialysis access which average 30 minutes...) Longer cases such as carotid endarterectomies, open AAA repairs are about 1-3 hour cases now. The cold leg bypass is probably one of the longer ones at 3.5 hours.... At least that has been my experience so far having done four months of vascular between my 3rd, 4th year of med school and intern year...
HI..I matched in to one of the integrated vascular surgery programs and it is awesome. One aspect that may pre-surgery applicants are unaware of is how much endovascular there is in vascular surgery today.
I get a mix of open procedures, imaging, vascular medicine, etc, etc.
Lifestyle has much improved (in my humble opinion) because there are so many more endo cases (ruptured aortas can now be treated endovascularly and rarely even go to the ICU). There is a great mix. But I am really inpatient and like short cases too (there are plenty in vascular: SO many diagnostic angios, stents,IVC fiters angioplasties, fistulas/dialysis access which average 30 minutes...) Longer cases such as carotid endarterectomies, open AAA repairs are about 1-3 hour cases now. The cold leg bypass is probably one of the longer ones at 3.5 hours.... At least that has been my experience so far having done four months of vascular between my 3rd, 4th year of med school and intern year...
can you tell me what the bread and butter cases are for vascular? also is there cross over with the interventional radiologists?
can you tell me what the bread and butter cases are for vascular? also is there cross over with the interventional radiologists?
there is no bread and butter in vascular.. all the patients are obese smokers who continue to smoke diabetics.. they are generally the most non compliant patients. They are pains in the arses.. their potassiums are all high, their sugars are all high.. and when they bring the trainwrecks to the OR with a K of 6.2 nothing bread and butter about that.. They are all high risk patients and they can die at any moment in the operating room.. How would you like to lead a life like that? I have never met more miserable people in my whole entire life.. the patients and the vascular surgeons deserve each other..
so there is no bread and butter in vascular..
another thing.. I think vascular may be technically difficult because most vasc surgeons i meet are just not that good..
and when i tell the vascular guys .. hey his K is 6.2.. bring it down and come back to see me.. they throw a hissy fit like they are 2 years old..
Whatcha think? I'm making all the Admins do it (Lee and Dr. Mom are still holding out)!😀
Is it wrong for me to say this? And if it is, please don't punish me by putting me on violation, but...
Dr. Cox, you're really hot...seriously.
In the community do surgeons have to take care of all the medical issues or do the hospitalists do this? It sounds like it would be cool to manage some of the medical issues but not the late night ones and just operate all the next day.
It sounds like it would be cool to manage some of the medical issues .
The consensus from attendings at traditional 2 year fellowship programs were that the traditional pathway is proven and produces a well trained vascular surgeon with the pre-requisite technical skill. They also cite the need to be trained in general in order to produce good exposures for aortic cases, and the ability to deal with a hostile abdomen. Finally, there is concern that a primary certificate model exposes the training program to increased risk of attrition. 20% of general surgery residents quit. An integrated vascular surgery residency does not have the luxury of replacing open spots with a pool of prelim surgery residents, as much of the training is specialized from the first year onwards. In addition, most programs offer only 1-2 spots a year, and losing a resident puts undue burden on the reputation of the training program, as well as the workload for other residents.There are more integrated vascular surgery residency (0+5) programs on ERAS this year. What is the general feeling among surgeons about this type of training (compared to the traditional 5+2)? Are the spots for the 0+5 programs fiercely competitive?
The consensus from attendings at traditional 2 year fellowship programs were that the traditional pathway is proven and produces a well trained vascular surgeon with the pre-requisite technical skill. They also cite the need to be trained in general in order to produce good exposures for aortic cases, and the ability to deal with a hostile abdomen.
While on the surface I'd agree, and for the immediate future it should be a concern, in the end, I still see this as yet another surgical specialty branching out on its own, much as urology, neurosurgery and ENT before it. Eventually, there will be 2-3 residents/year at each program, allowing for some attrition without total devastation.Finally, there is concern that a primary certificate model exposes the training program to increased risk of attrition. 20% of general surgery residents quit. An integrated vascular surgery residency does not have the luxury of replacing open spots with a pool of prelim surgery residents, as much of the training is specialized from the first year onwards.
However there is a realization that there is great demand for the primary certificate from the applicant pool, and programs face the risk of losing the best and brightest future vascular surgeons to the primary certificate programs.
is there any reason a vascular surgeon couldn't have a practice virtually identical to an IR's ?
... I have seen there are a few programs out there where surgery residents can go directly into interventional radiology tracts...
whats the lifestyle of a vascular surgeon like ? much call?
Adding to the improved lifestyle is the little known fact that vascular surgery is rapidly turning into one of the best compensated surgical subspecialties, 2nd only to neurosurgery.
Why? For whatever reason, those endovascular procedures tend to bring large reimbursements for the hospitals, and they pay the physicians richly for being able to provide those services. That IVC filter I mentioned above? It's $15k for a 10 minute procedure.
Where was this? I always wondered if you can do a year of IR after surgery. A good combination of IR + Trauma. As well, those procedures pay quite well.
Bump...
could someone please explain why medicare/insurance companies reimburse so highly for vascular procedures? I know there is a large overlap with IR, but I don't understand why these procedures have such high reimbursement rates (beyond procedures tending to pay higher in general). Sorry if this is an obvious question.
Would appreciate njbmd's opinion as well 🙂
Where is njbmd when you need her? she is also a vascular surgeon and always has very insightful perspectives.
As to why, who knows? Clearly the radiologists were much more active in getting reimbursement rates higher than general surgeons were.
Interestingly enough, I read somewhere that CMS reimbursements for diagnostic radiology were cut by 30% whie Anesthesia reimbursements were raised by the same percentage.
The SGR formula is ******ed.
Radiology reimbursements have dropped. I know I make less this year for a stereotactic guided biopsy and for reading my images than I did last year. Too had I can't operate and administer anesthesia at the same time! 😉
Wouldn't this sorta be considered 'job security'? 😛 There isn't a treatment more definitive than surgery for these kinds of cases, right?Some interesting comments on here about patients. It seems like transplant / cardio / vascular patients are considered to be the worst - they are either alcoholics or obese diabetics, neither of which lends itself greatly to compliance with the doctors orders. Do you think these are really the fields with the worst patients, i.e., do you think endocrine/minimally invasive or ortho/neuro/ENT patients are better to work with? How much would you consider the patient population as a factor in you decision of residency/fellowship?
Thanks for the responses WS and Castro 🙂
Sounds like reimbursement is not very easy to predict.
It also seems like you guys are saying the way to keep doing open procedures would be to focus mainly on veins (please correct me if I misinterpreted that).
Wouldn't this sorta be considered 'job security'? 😛 There isn't a treatment more definitive than surgery for these kinds of cases, right?