List: What field would you like to into

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Family Practice.

By the way, my family owes a lot to our ped hemotologist

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This is all IF I get into Medical School:

Irongirl- I am seconding the Neonatology Vote.

Shimmer118- what is Aeropace Medicine about? How do you branch into that? I am interested.

•••quote:•••

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Okay Ewells posted before me or something so his/her Family Practice vote needs to be fixed into mine. I am fixing it now.

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Right now gen. peds, but that could always change :)

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OB/GYN for me!

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I'm actually splitting the "Pediatrics" category into general and specialty, as the two are not necessarily one and the same. If I miscopy the numbers, I apologize in advance!!! :oops:

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Its amazing how much things change once you actually see what life is like in these specialties. The majority of you want surgery right now as premeds. In our class, only 10-12 out of 200 people are going into a general surgery residency. I'll let you guys figure out for yourselves why during your third year in med school.
 
Adding Neurology

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Definitely peds (hence the name), but maybe peds emergency or heme/onc.

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Internal Medicine for me :) (of course, could change over the next 4yrs)

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to answer the question about aerospace medicine:
they are the flight surgeons in the navy or the marines. they give physical exams to pilots or any flight crew, and they treat them with any disorders-deal with normal people in abnormal environments. they also work 50% of the time in the clinic, when not with their flight squadron. they go through initial part of the flight training, and when assigned to an f14 or f18 squadron they may become qualified in those jets, especially likely if that's in a marine jet squadron. the purpose of them flying jets is so they could know how the pilots feel when they fly!
here is link for more info:
<a href="http://wwwsam.brooks.af.mil/af/files/fsguide/HTML/00_Index.html" target="_blank">http://wwwsam.brooks.af.mil/af/files/fsguide/HTML/00_Index.html</a> -ch 27 is the career description.

also if you type navy or air force flight surgeon in google.com you get biographies of some people who used to serve as flight surgeons.

the negativity that i find with this job is the low pay (navy will pay a LCDR flight surgeon &lt;150000). i don't plan to study so hard so that i could be making less than a computer programmer. and if i just do 5 years and get out and do civilian residensy, i'll just have to retire 5 years later.. i mean it's an awesome job but i don't want to still be a LCDR in the navy when i'm 45 y o.

that's why i choose orthopedic surgery for now. maybe i'll be less materialistic later on, though i doubt as i'll probably think about starting family in med school. i don't know why you all choose general surgery? is orthopedic impossible residensy to get?

orthopedic surgery 1
 
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•••quote:•••Originally posted by Whisker Barrell Cortex:
•Its amazing how much things change once you actually see what life is like in these specialties. The majority of you want surgery right now as premeds. In our class, only 10-12 out of 200 people are going into a general surgery residency. I'll let you guys figure out for yourselves why during your third year in med school.•••••I thought very few people go into surgery because it is competitive. No?
 
Gotta go with Internal Medicine (and worry about the subspecialty later). :)

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A lot of people don't go into surgery because third-year surgery rounds are torture. It depends on the school, but most of the time it's downright brutal--36 hour shifts, that kind of thing. Yes, it is competitive and each hospital has such few spots for surgery residents, but so many people are turned off by the lifestyle before they even apply for residency.
 
Another vote for psychiatry:

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Surgery (particularly Trauma Ortho), and adding Dr. Don's to "Pediatrics (specialty)"

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General Peds all the way, baby! I can't think of a cooler way to spend my time.

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•••quote:•••Originally posted by Joseph Reses:
•Another vote for psychiatry:
•••••:clap: thought I'd have to fend off shrink jokes on my own <img border="0" alt="[Laughy]" title="" src="graemlins/laughy.gif" />
 
Right now, I'm thinking emergency medicine.

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I am joining you lizardking I am shocked so few people are interested in neurology (or neurosurgery) chalk me up (probably adolescent neurology)...if not that then probably internal medicine

also adding player's psychiatry

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Family Practice all the way!

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don't count me twice :rolleyes:

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sorry, I skipped one before

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Adding Emergency for myself. You get to do it all there!

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i forgot to add myself to the tally. IM.

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Most premeds say surgery because they think of hotshot, wealthy surgeons running around in porsches and flying their planes on the weekend. In fact, they are in the OR 12 plus hours a day, feet swollen into their shoes, with no spare time. They spend it cutting. Money in the bank, but no time to spend it. Unfortunately, some premeds (no offense to anyone on this board) have no conception of what it's really like to be a surgeon. I don't, myself. But I do know it's long hours with little spare time.

As for me, peds subspecialty.

Alicia
 
My sister is a first-year surgical resident, working 100+ hour weeks for chump change. I certainly don't have any illusions about it. :)
 
HEY!!! who deducted my only other emergency medicine pal from the list!?!? i was getting lonely there having to look at the "(1)".
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Adding myself to the ranks of the future neurologists :)

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To be honest, I'm suprized there aren't more people interested in radiology... I know it's not the most exciting area of medicine, but I think that the pay is a fair bit higher than derm, the lifestyle is probably just about the same, and you get to work with such a wide variety of cases!

I'm interested in radiology because of my physics background, and I think it has a lot of potential in the future. I just listened to a talk about how they are beginning to use NMR and MRI techniques to detect many different types of cancer much earlier than before!

Call me crazy, but I don't think the future of medicine is cutting people open 120 hours a week, but curing them from the outside. And the fact that I can have a lifestyle and spend time with my future family is certainly important...

Maybe that's just me... :wink:
 
As someone who has been through 3.75 years of med school, I've chosen radiology and am excited to have found this awesome field. I wish I'd known about it as early as you do brandonite. I hope I match into a good residency spot.
 
Ok, I'll bite. Internal Medicine (I also will worry about the subspecialty later).

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can't believe that i'm only the second one to chime in with ortho... i thought it was the most competitive one, too! guess i'm better off than i thought. or at least i won't have to compete with any of you smartypantses!!!

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can't believe that i'm only the second one to chime in with ortho... i thought it was the most competitive one, too! guess i'm better off than i thought. or at least i won't have to compete with any of you smartypantses!!!

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I interviewed somewhere with this arrogant guy that was literally puffing his chest out and saying he was going to become a surgeon. I'm still trying to figure out how I prevented myself from throwing-up. In anycase I used to say I wanted to go into surgery, but there's no way I'm going that route. My dad is a superman surgeon, so I've seen the brutal hours first hand and I ain't going near it. Chalk one up for Pediatric neurology.

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Actually, this is a pretty fun test that was posted on here last year:

<a href="http://www.med-ed.virginia.edu/specialties/" target="_blank">http://www.med-ed.virginia.edu/specialties/</a>

It kind of matches up your personality type with compatible specialties. It seems to be pretty accurate for most of the people who have tried it.
 
I'm gonna agree with souljah, preventative cardio is so interesting and awesome; however, I'm not sure I would want to limit myself to all non-invasive procedures because I do think that angioplasty, cardioseal, amplatzer, MEMS, etc. all have their place in getting people back on the road to recovery using the preventative techniques (albeit preventing the 2nd recurrence)later on. Adding one to preventative cardio. :D

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Well, as a 4th year med student going in to surgery, I'm amazed about the number of people who think they want to do surgery. I think it's great although maybe not realistic. Your rotation as a 3rd year med student is EYE OPENING. The alarm clock going off at 3:30 am is painful especially when you got home at 8 or 9 pm. BUT, surgery is FUN.

When I interviewed for med school I thought I wanted to do Pediatrics. Man was I wrong. I truly hope you guys are telling the admissions committees you want to do surgery and not what they may want to hear.

The lifestyle of a surgeon does suck and the pay per hour is not as good as some. Just to open your eyes a little, if you walk out of general surgery residency right now, salary offers are $150-$210,000 per year. Granted, a lot of money, but many specialties have far less rigorous residencies and post-residency lifestyles and make more money. So if finances is your reason, keep looking (unless you do cardiothoracics which is a specialty for a different type of soul). If you love the OR and the ongoing changes in surgery, then go for it.

My advice is to go into med school with a very open mind about your possible choice of specialty. I did and am thrilled to start my residency in General Surgery in July (although I may not be as thrilled once they start killing me for 110 hours/week). Good thread.

BTW, derm is competitive b/c there are only a few spots, 40 hour/week residency, 300K/year when your done. Competitiveness is all relative in all specialties.
 
•••quote:•••Originally posted by lilycat:
•Actually, this is a pretty fun test that was posted on here last year:

<a href="http://www.med-ed.virginia.edu/specialties/" target="_blank">http://www.med-ed.virginia.edu/specialties/</a>

It kind of matches up your personality type with compatible specialties. It seems to be pretty accurate for most of the people who have tried it.•••••I think its accuracy is seriously suspect. It ranked my current favorite psychiatry@31, and derm tied for #1 - something I will never even consider...oh god the boredom...
 
•••quote:•••Originally posted by lilycat:
•Actually, this is a pretty fun test that was posted on here last year:

<a href="http://www.med-ed.virginia.edu/specialties/" target="_blank">http://www.med-ed.virginia.edu/specialties/</a>

It kind of matches up your personality type with compatible specialties. It seems to be pretty accurate for most of the people who have tried it.•••••I got a score of 47 for pediatrics, my top match result. They kept repeating the same questions, though..I guess to see how we REALLY feel about each answer. #8 was dermatology, the field I'm hoping to go into :)
 
hey player, wanna trade? :wink:
 
I'm interested in internal medicine. I would like to specialize in diabetes treatment and prevention (endocrinology).
 
hey liontree,
would you elaborate on how cardiothoracic is specialty for another type of soul? i realize it's tough, but don't exactly figure HOW tough it is. maybe you can shed some light?
thanx!
 
I thought it was kind of a fun test. All of my results were in the 45 to 43 range. I guess I just either have too many interests or just simply don't know what I want to do. My top three matches were Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Psychiatry, and Pathology. My top choice, Pediatrics, ranked 12th. Go figure!
 
Just reposting the list so others can add :D

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I got occupational medicine, followed by PM&R... Neither one is exactly my idea of fun. Strange.

I think I'll stick with radiology and cardiology for now. :D Clerkship is for final decisions. :D
 
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