I know this sounds crazy bc it is so early on in the year, but I knew this field wasnt for me before I started- I just was too late to try to get out. I am trying to see if I can switch back to IM to save this year from being burnt. is it possible to start IM as a 2nd year with completing a prelim year, or does my lack of clinic time during prelim year prevent that? in other words, is there a way to make up that lost clinic time from prelim year?
thank you all for the advice
If you completed an IM prelim year, you should be able to roll over and continue in IM without much difficulty, assuming you can get someone to give you a spot. The lack of continuity clinic as an intern isn't a big deal since the program requirements only say you have an average of 1/2 day/wk over 36 months. That's easy enough to make up over the course of 24-30 months.
As to how to proceed, your best approach is to talk to your prelim PD and the IM PD at your current program (if they are the same person, so much the better) and tell them you want to go back to IM and see if they have a spot. After that, you'll need to either cold call programs or go through the match again next year.
Expect to start as an intern again for a few months (even up to a full year, especially if it's not your prelim program).
I think you should approach your advanced program PD now and tell him that you can't continue the specialty and intend to resign. He can make your life hell or he can help you out. No idea which way that will go, but it really doesn't matter at this point.
You can quit whenever you want, but your contract probably has a 30 day out clause for you (and the program) and the NRMP has a 45 day requirement, after which you can quit a program without risking an NRMP violation. Practically speaking at this point, if you walk in to your PD's office today and tell him you're quitting, the 30/45 day windows are the same and you're golden.
The last thing I'd say is that I wouldn't expect to be able to find a job for the next year with just a prelim year behind you, especially without any clinic experience. Just throwing that out there.