- Joined
- May 12, 2018
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Here's some background:
Preclinical grades are fine, clinical grades mix of HP and Honors (Honors in Psych, Surgery, Outpatient Medicine, Radiology and HP in Medicine, Peds, OB/GYN), 252 Step 1, at a top 20 med school. I basically have no research (one abstract in ortho) and a few extracurriculars from preclinical. Not AOA.
I was mostly miserable during clerkship year due to being depressed and hating the constant performative aspect of most rotations, but I enjoyed psych, medicine and radiology the most. I was thinking about urology for a few months, and am currently on a sub-i, but am not really digging it too much. As we start to roll through May, my anxiety is starting to get worse and I'm feeling more lost. I have recently come to the realization that I'm not terribly interested in doing academics, and really just want to be a kickass community physician. Not that I don't enjoy fast-paced, continually evolving fields (I do!), I just don't particularly enjoy the work of data-collecting and writing. I would also like some say in geography, as I'd like to end up on the west coast.
Medicine: I wasn't that into my inpatient medicine rotation, but I did enjoy the process of developing a differential and the amount of patient interaction it afforded. Going through fellowship in GI or cards could give me the procedural aspect that I want, as well, but applying into medicine with the intention of moving on to fellowship seems risky as it's not guaranteed, and I would not enjoy my job if I was just an internist/primary care doc. Also, given my HP in my core medicine rotation, I'm not sure what caliber of IM residency I would be able to get (most of my attendings gave me great comments and I could definitely get letters, just my shelf score that brought me down to a HP... the clerkship director actually told me that I was two points away from the honors cut-off. Clearly, I'm not still salty about this), which would affect my chances of getting a fellowship position, I imagine.
Urology: What I've been considering for a bit. As an attending, it seems like you get good control over how much clinic time you want, and the types of surgeries you perform (you can go with bigger surgeries ex nephrectomies and prostates, or stick to smaller quality of life procedures like stones, TURPs and slings). I like the patient population and the fact that most of the time, your interventions make people feel better quickly. Few emergencies, as well. Job market is great, too. Like medical specialties, I would get to have longer-term follow-up with patients, which is a plus for me. Downsides include residency, which is mostly surgery (from what I've gathered), and long surgeries bore me to tears. I generally dislike most surgery, but I love the smaller procedures like stone removal, TURPs and TURBTs, green light prostate ablations, etc, so I imagine residency would be an absolute slog. I've already started working on research in the chance I try applying, but that unmatched rate freaks me out. My PD and another senior attending who works on admissions said I should be fine and I could match somewhere as long as I get my aways in order and have SOME research to put on my CV by the time I apply so I can talk about it in interviews, but... I would probably have to backup apply to something else, just in case. Going unmatched and having to SOAP is my worst nightmare.
Psychiatry: I genuinely loved my psych rotation. Lovely people and the patients are among the most interesting in medicine (to me, at least). Seeing as I've suffered from depression, anxiety and OCD in the past, I felt more empathy towards psych patients in general. While patient compliance seems like it would be frustrating, knowing that you can completely change one's worldview for the better stands out as one of the coolest things in medicine. Acceptance of psychiatrists and mental health in general is on the upswing, and I imagine psych is going to be booming in the near future. And, in honesty, lifestyle is a plus, and I might have a bit more say in geographical location if I apply psych. I would find it appealing to be in clinic most of the week, then be on-call as consult liaison for a couple of days to put on a white coat and interface with the more "medicine-y" aspects of psych. Downsides include the possibility of psychologists encroaching on the field with prescription rights, the aforementioned patient compliance issues, and the lack of "quick-fixes" that urology can give.
Rads: Radiology is pretty different than most of the other things I listed, but I actually really like imaging and being a core component of pretty much every field in medicine. I'm fascinated by how much you can learn about a patient from their imaging, and the work seems very intellectually stimulating. Lifestyle and compensation is great (for now), and I've been in awe of how much the radiology attendings know about pathophysiology. I thought about IR for a bit, too, as you get to do many small-ish procedures and have more patient interaction, but it seems that even as a diagnostic radiologist, you can do procedures if you want to (particularly in body imaging and nuclear medicine). Major con is lack of patient interaction, but there is plenty of collaboration with other fields that rely on your reports, and IR is making a push for more clinic time (at least, in my experience so far). I know IR is extremely competitive, but since I wouldn't be ready to commit to IR, I would most likely apply DR and try to go for programs that offer early specialization in IR tracks, just to keep the option open.
Derm: I might enjoy derm since it combines procedures, patient interaction, you can have long term follow up with patients with chronic inflammatory conditions like psoriasis, treat and prevent melanoma, and have a great lifestyle to boot. And as someone with chronic allergies and eczema, I know that skin stuff sucks ass and my self-esteem improves dramatically when my skin doesn’t look gross. I just never thought I would be able to do it since it’s such a bloodbath... but I guess it’s not that much of a jump from urology to derm in terms of competitiveness, I guess?
I wouldn’t mind taking a research year to fill out my anemic CV (I mean, it’s pretty bad, my step 1 score is basically the only thing I have going for me) since this is the rest of my life, you know? One more year in the big scheme of things is not that much more of a sacrifice. And I would still be able to backup apply to psych since I can make a good case for wanting it, I think. Plus, my school has a very highly regarded derm program with some big names, and I think on the whole, we match people to derm regularly. Would not gunning for derm from day 1 of med school hurt me, if I would just want to match derm somewhere?
So, I think it's clear I'm still trying to figure some stuff out, and it's May of my third year, so I'm low-key freaking out. Has anyone been in a position where they are trying to choose between things that might be drastically different? How has it worked out? Any advice would be appreciated.
Preclinical grades are fine, clinical grades mix of HP and Honors (Honors in Psych, Surgery, Outpatient Medicine, Radiology and HP in Medicine, Peds, OB/GYN), 252 Step 1, at a top 20 med school. I basically have no research (one abstract in ortho) and a few extracurriculars from preclinical. Not AOA.
I was mostly miserable during clerkship year due to being depressed and hating the constant performative aspect of most rotations, but I enjoyed psych, medicine and radiology the most. I was thinking about urology for a few months, and am currently on a sub-i, but am not really digging it too much. As we start to roll through May, my anxiety is starting to get worse and I'm feeling more lost. I have recently come to the realization that I'm not terribly interested in doing academics, and really just want to be a kickass community physician. Not that I don't enjoy fast-paced, continually evolving fields (I do!), I just don't particularly enjoy the work of data-collecting and writing. I would also like some say in geography, as I'd like to end up on the west coast.
Medicine: I wasn't that into my inpatient medicine rotation, but I did enjoy the process of developing a differential and the amount of patient interaction it afforded. Going through fellowship in GI or cards could give me the procedural aspect that I want, as well, but applying into medicine with the intention of moving on to fellowship seems risky as it's not guaranteed, and I would not enjoy my job if I was just an internist/primary care doc. Also, given my HP in my core medicine rotation, I'm not sure what caliber of IM residency I would be able to get (most of my attendings gave me great comments and I could definitely get letters, just my shelf score that brought me down to a HP... the clerkship director actually told me that I was two points away from the honors cut-off. Clearly, I'm not still salty about this), which would affect my chances of getting a fellowship position, I imagine.
Urology: What I've been considering for a bit. As an attending, it seems like you get good control over how much clinic time you want, and the types of surgeries you perform (you can go with bigger surgeries ex nephrectomies and prostates, or stick to smaller quality of life procedures like stones, TURPs and slings). I like the patient population and the fact that most of the time, your interventions make people feel better quickly. Few emergencies, as well. Job market is great, too. Like medical specialties, I would get to have longer-term follow-up with patients, which is a plus for me. Downsides include residency, which is mostly surgery (from what I've gathered), and long surgeries bore me to tears. I generally dislike most surgery, but I love the smaller procedures like stone removal, TURPs and TURBTs, green light prostate ablations, etc, so I imagine residency would be an absolute slog. I've already started working on research in the chance I try applying, but that unmatched rate freaks me out. My PD and another senior attending who works on admissions said I should be fine and I could match somewhere as long as I get my aways in order and have SOME research to put on my CV by the time I apply so I can talk about it in interviews, but... I would probably have to backup apply to something else, just in case. Going unmatched and having to SOAP is my worst nightmare.
Psychiatry: I genuinely loved my psych rotation. Lovely people and the patients are among the most interesting in medicine (to me, at least). Seeing as I've suffered from depression, anxiety and OCD in the past, I felt more empathy towards psych patients in general. While patient compliance seems like it would be frustrating, knowing that you can completely change one's worldview for the better stands out as one of the coolest things in medicine. Acceptance of psychiatrists and mental health in general is on the upswing, and I imagine psych is going to be booming in the near future. And, in honesty, lifestyle is a plus, and I might have a bit more say in geographical location if I apply psych. I would find it appealing to be in clinic most of the week, then be on-call as consult liaison for a couple of days to put on a white coat and interface with the more "medicine-y" aspects of psych. Downsides include the possibility of psychologists encroaching on the field with prescription rights, the aforementioned patient compliance issues, and the lack of "quick-fixes" that urology can give.
Rads: Radiology is pretty different than most of the other things I listed, but I actually really like imaging and being a core component of pretty much every field in medicine. I'm fascinated by how much you can learn about a patient from their imaging, and the work seems very intellectually stimulating. Lifestyle and compensation is great (for now), and I've been in awe of how much the radiology attendings know about pathophysiology. I thought about IR for a bit, too, as you get to do many small-ish procedures and have more patient interaction, but it seems that even as a diagnostic radiologist, you can do procedures if you want to (particularly in body imaging and nuclear medicine). Major con is lack of patient interaction, but there is plenty of collaboration with other fields that rely on your reports, and IR is making a push for more clinic time (at least, in my experience so far). I know IR is extremely competitive, but since I wouldn't be ready to commit to IR, I would most likely apply DR and try to go for programs that offer early specialization in IR tracks, just to keep the option open.
Derm: I might enjoy derm since it combines procedures, patient interaction, you can have long term follow up with patients with chronic inflammatory conditions like psoriasis, treat and prevent melanoma, and have a great lifestyle to boot. And as someone with chronic allergies and eczema, I know that skin stuff sucks ass and my self-esteem improves dramatically when my skin doesn’t look gross. I just never thought I would be able to do it since it’s such a bloodbath... but I guess it’s not that much of a jump from urology to derm in terms of competitiveness, I guess?
I wouldn’t mind taking a research year to fill out my anemic CV (I mean, it’s pretty bad, my step 1 score is basically the only thing I have going for me) since this is the rest of my life, you know? One more year in the big scheme of things is not that much more of a sacrifice. And I would still be able to backup apply to psych since I can make a good case for wanting it, I think. Plus, my school has a very highly regarded derm program with some big names, and I think on the whole, we match people to derm regularly. Would not gunning for derm from day 1 of med school hurt me, if I would just want to match derm somewhere?
So, I think it's clear I'm still trying to figure some stuff out, and it's May of my third year, so I'm low-key freaking out. Has anyone been in a position where they are trying to choose between things that might be drastically different? How has it worked out? Any advice would be appreciated.
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