- Joined
- Jun 27, 2013
- Messages
- 294
- Reaction score
- 258
I got a couple questions via PM and someone said I should do a AMA, so here it is. Happy to answer any questions!
It’s interesting that there are NICU docs who are into developmental medicine. I imagine that there’s a lot of reward when you see kids you helped as sick babies grow to be healthy. What other aspects of the job do you find particularly rewarding?
If one isn’t massively into bench research, are there niches for research work focused more on social or public health matters? How about behavioral?
I got called out on transport for a delivery the other day where a kid was crashing from an otherwise low risk delivery. Likely some birth trauma and HIE. The pH on the cord gas was less than 7 and they couldn't get the saturations above 70. They didn't know what to do. We get there STAT. The kid also had a pneumothorax that I saw when I got there. I intubate, do a needle decompression and put in a chest tube, put in an urgent central line, and start cooling on the way to home base. A week and a half later, he is discharged in room air, with a completely normal MRI and a normal neuro exam. It felt good. Worth the hours of USMLE, the residency..all of it! Seeing those parents walk out with that baby made it all worthwhile. They sent me a card yesterday thanking me personally. All the paperwork and all the nonsense you have to do - stuff like this makes up for it.
...
Somehow I'm managing a marriage and a family too.
Keep your chin up. It's worth it!
why is there so much research in pediatric fellowships. Noticed the same with pediatric nephrology. can you really learn everything in a fellowship in a year? why have everyone waste the other 2 years with mandatory research? Of course there might be some that like the research
Interesting. That makes sense. The pediatric nephrologist that I worked with was great, knew his stuff, was seeing incredibly complex patients which was surprising to me because I am guessing adult nephrologists do the 3 year fellowship with not much research. Good for you guys. I think pediatric specialities are fascinating and learning it in a such a short time is great.
- I would rather die than run gels for my research. You can certainly do basic science, and some fellowship or fellowship programs may push that. But in NICU at least, people are doing lots of bench work, lots of clinical and clinical trials, stuff with public health and global health, psych research (e.g looking at parental coping during long NICU stays, or communication between staff or to parents), QI, education, neurodevelopmental, and all sorts of other types of research. I am doing clinical research. People these days are open to a lot. Many fellowship programs will pay for you to have your masters degree as part of your fellowship (such as Masters in Clinical Investigation, MPH, Masters in Education, etc etc). They obviously want people to go into academia.
- As for reward - I actually don't like clinic at all 😛. It's just not my style, but yes, people do enjoy that aspect of it. As for what I find rewarding - first, I've been saying all positive things but just like any other field, there's negatives too. It's not perfect, but it's great for me. I'll quote a post I made in another thread about an incident that really hits it home for me:
When I have a few more minutes, I'll post a day in the life and other specialties I was considering before I chose NICU.
- I think you can - it's very concentrated learning. It's 12 months of being on service, plus cross covers/weekends during your research time, so it ends up being more. Some specialties are a little more, closer to 15-17 months. Whether research should be required is a big source of debate, and I personally think they should offer shorter fellowships in the fields with shortages. But the bottom line is that it's not going away. I want to have research as ~50% of my career, so it's not as big of a deal for me. But another thing to consider is that many pediatric specialties (NICU actually being one of the exceptions), there are no jobs in private practice. You used the neprhology example - for an adult nephrologist, you can do private practice or you can do academics. In Pediatrics, I think there might be around ZERO nationwide jobs for private practice nephrologists. Maybe not zero, but I don't know of a single one and it's certainly not a large amount. That's because kids are mostly healthy and the type of problems you need to see these specialists for are rare and frequently require the services of a children's hospitals and the resources they have. As I said, NICU is actually one of the ones with a very large private practice component (mainly because any large delivery hospital will have some form of a NICU and will need Neonatologists, and so you can practice away from large children's hospitals if you wanted. But then you are more likely to see only bread and butter NICU cases, and will transfer out the more complex or weirder cases.)
Thank you! I’m really interested in psych and it’s my first choice, but peds -> higher acuity subspecialty is my close number 2. I’m very into the idea that neonatologists could make use of mental health knowledge, basic psychology and maybe even counseling skills. Is there any possibility at all of someone getting a master’s or additional training in psychology or mental health during that research period?
- I would rather die than run gels for my research. You can certainly do basic science, and some fellowship or fellowship programs may push that. But in NICU at least, people are doing lots of bench work, lots of clinical and clinical trials, stuff with public health and global health, psych research (e.g looking at parental coping during long NICU stays, or communication between staff or to parents), QI, education, neurodevelopmental, and all sorts of other types of research. I am doing clinical research. People these days are open to a lot. Many fellowship programs will pay for you to have your masters degree as part of your fellowship (such as Masters in Clinical Investigation, MPH, Masters in Education, etc etc). They obviously want people to go into academia.
- As for reward - I actually don't like clinic at all 😛. It's just not my style, but yes, people do enjoy that aspect of it. As for what I find rewarding - first, I've been saying all positive things but just like any other field, there's negatives too. It's not perfect, but it's great for me. I'll quote a post I made in another thread about an incident that really hits it home for me:
That's not something I can answer. You'd have to talk directly to fellowship programs. You'd want to go to a place that has a history of allowing fellows to pursue a variety of masters degrees, and ideally the exact degree you're going for (it's always hard to be the first). And then you'll likely have to justify your choice and how this degree is essential to your research career in the future. To that end, you have to build up your CV so that it tells a story and makes sense.Thank you! I’m really interested in psych and it’s my first choice, but peds -> higher acuity subspecialty is my close number 2. I’m very into the idea that neonatologists could make use of mental health knowledge, basic psychology and maybe even counseling skills. Is there any possibility at all of someone getting a master’s or additional training in psychology or mental health during that research period?
Not super familiar with the field, but from what I have since heard of it, it sounds quite interesting. What is the lifestyle like? I know adult critical care is pretty rough, but wondered how NICU compared?
I'm not well educated on the path to a NICU fellowship, so what was your path to get there?
why is there so much research in pediatric fellowships. Noticed the same with pediatric nephrology. can you really learn everything in a fellowship in a year? why have everyone waste the other 2 years with mandatory research? Of course there might be some that like the research
To do a Neonatology fellowship, you have to do a three year Pediatrics residency and then match into a three year Neonatology fellowship. Neither of which are particularly competitive (though, as you can imagine, the top programs in any specialty are hyper competitive). But if you're a US medical student, you will match into a pediatrics residency. And unless you're a terrible resident, you will match into a NICU fellowship. I like procedures, and I like acuity. So I was deciding between Cardiology, PICU and NICU in the end. I don't like outpatient much, and most Cardiology positions these days require a fourth year fellowship, which wasn't super appealing to me - even though I like the physiology. Plus, interventional or EP, which would be the two things I'd be most interested in, are very much oversaturated, and I have a severe geographic restriction due to family, and I know for a fact there would be almost no chance of a job in the area I'm in doing that. So that was out. PICU vs NICU was very hard and it was a last minute decision. I liked the variety and the acuity of PICU and I loved the longer term management (combining both acute and then when they stabilize) and I LOVE the delivery room in the NICU. In the end, the opportunity to practice in a larger variety of settings - (esp. as I get older) overcame PICU and its larger day to day variety of patients. I also liked that NICU is a more enclosed unit than the PICU. We don't like consulting, and often ignore the consultants when we don't like what they say. Whereas the PICU felt like every patient had a bunch of consults. I recognize that could also just be my experience with it. Either way, it was a close decision and I know I would have been happy doing either.
I'm just wondering is there a particular reason why Cardiology/EP is over saturated in most areas people wanna live because I looked on jobs online and you're right. Most jobs available are not in desirable areas.
There was an increase in fellowship spots but there was no increase in the prevalence of congenital cardiac disease. Plus it’s the era of hyper specialized centers so you have fewer centers with extremely high volume (so you need less overall people, but the people who do it are very busy). Good for patient outcomes but may suck if you want to do it and aren’t a superstar.
As someone who’s interested in neonatology, I’m wondering what the job market’s like? How’s the compensation? Do most fellowship grads go into academics or PP?
Day in the life, this is what happened on monday (I picked monday because it seemed to be a day with a decent amount of things that happened, but wasn't insane). I am on service:Day in the life?
This sounds great, honestly. I need some more exposure in 4th year and get the chance to see this dynamic first hand.That is an interesting question. In fellowship, I don't really interact with kids who can talk back to me...or are old enough to do much. I've been an intensivist at heart, all the way from the beginning. In med school, I initially wanted to do IM --> Pulm/CC or EM-->CC, and when I chose peds, I was always between PICU, NICU and Cardiology. Didn't even consider anything else. So I am not the kindergarten teacher type - though you will definitely have those during residency. Fewer of those types of personalities in fellowships like this one, but sometimes still there. Generally, and this is definitely a biased view, you get many fewer personality disorders in pediatrics. People just tend to be more chill and happier, which makes for a much better work environment. Overall, there definitely tends to be more chill atmosphere in all peds specialties compared to their adult counterparts, but when you're in a situation where you have to deal with kids who are dying or very seriously sick, there is an expected decorum and seriousness that you have most of the time.
It’s interesting the number of people I’ve happened across (myself included) who are bouncing between peds and psychHey, thanks for this! I'm really interested in going into NICU, it's actually one of my top 2 interests - the other being psych.
Could you talk about how you decided on peds/NICU rather than other specialties? What qualities of NICU pushed you towards it, and did any qualities push you away?
Right? There's a lot of overlap in my mind, though. Think about all the social factors and the psychological stages kids go through in quick succession as they grow up. There's also the very interesting social psych stuff involving parents and investigating unspoken family dynamics. I think what draws a lot of people to psychiatry is the social aspect where environment plays a huge role in putting the patients into context. Similar for peds. Both groups also tend to be easier going in my experience.I really don't see the interest overlap... at all.. It's like being torn between surgery and pathology 😕
It's a misguided attempt at forcing people into academia left over from the 1990s. There's not really more to it than that. 1 year is probably too short for clinical proficiency and adequate experience, but 18 months is probably reasonable. At least for more procedure based specialties.why is there so much research in pediatric fellowships. Noticed the same with pediatric nephrology. can you really learn everything in a fellowship in a year? why have everyone waste the other 2 years with mandatory research? Of course there might be some that like the research
Peds resident here.
How are your overall responsibilities different than a resident's? Do residents write most of your notes for you, put it orders, etc? How do your call nights compare to when you were a resident?
In a different vein, are you able to moonlight as a fellow? If so, what kind of opportunities are there? I'm likely going to be doing a fellowship, but escaping the relative poverty of being a resident with kids to support would be nice.
Great thread, thank you!! A general question for those mentioning job opportunities in specific geographic regions. Any advice on how to find credible information on this? I'm a measly 2nd year but a lot of my future career plans are geographic-dependent, so I'd like to be able to see this information as well!
Hey, thanks for this! I'm really interested in going into NICU, it's actually one of my top 2 interests - the other being psych.
Could you talk about how you decided on peds/NICU rather than other specialties? What qualities of NICU pushed you towards it, and did any qualities push you away?
HmmI was always going to do ICU, even in medical school. It's just something I like. I enjoy procedures and I enjoy medicine. I like some parts of the OR but I can't really see myself there all the time. So EM/ICU was a natural fit. Then I did 3rd year and realized I am not a nice enough person to do adult medicine and not become completely jaded and cynical. And I didn't want to be jaded and cynical and have contempt/dislike for my patients. Utmost respect to people who can do adult medicine without becoming jaded and hating their patients or jobs, but I don't think I could - not after the 5th re-admission for CHF because the dude won't stop eating at McDonalds or COPD who keeps smoking. I loved pediatrics because most times parents want the best for their kids, even when they disagree with you. And when a kid gets re-admitted for the fifth time - it's never the kid's own fault (it might be the parents fault in some cases, but you always have sympathy for the kid). So I can remain invested in my patient's care, regardless of the other circumstances. That's just me though. So I chose peds, and at that point, it was going to be PICU/CICU/NICU. And I've differentiated those things in other posts.
Hi MEN2C, I’ve been following this thread closely. Thank you for doing this!
This is a bit more of an individual question, but maybe it could also help someone in the future. Basically, I’m finishing up peds intern year and trying to decide between NICU and PICU. I’m wondering if you think I should keep exploring neonatology given my likes/dislikes of my experience so far.
I love physiology and intensive care. I’ve done one NICU rotation in residency so far. I enjoyed acutely ill babies in the NICU, for example, seizures, hyper/hypotension, respiratory distress, sepsis, meningitis. I think vents are super interesting. I love intubations, placing lines, etc.
However, I was never crazy about deliveries. If a patient needs bag mask ventilation or intubation I thought it was interesting. But was not a fan of most deliveries, especially being called for things like shoulder dystocia. Basically I didn’t like going whenever we went and the baby was fine, which I know is dumb because you obviously never know in advance, but still. Also, the feeding/growing part killed me and adjusting O2 by 0.5 liters slowly over 1-3 days also killed me.
I do PICU in a few months. Do you think it would be worthwhile to continue to explore NICU? I have the option to do a NICU away at a busy community hospital in town, so I could get a little different perspective.
Thanks!
Hi MEN2C, I’ve been following this thread closely. Thank you for doing this!
This is a bit more of an individual question, but maybe it could also help someone in the future. Basically, I’m finishing up peds intern year and trying to decide between NICU and PICU. I’m wondering if you think I should keep exploring neonatology given my likes/dislikes of my experience so far.
I love physiology and intensive care. I’ve done one NICU rotation in residency so far. I enjoyed acutely ill babies in the NICU, for example, seizures, hyper/hypotension, respiratory distress, sepsis, meningitis. I think vents are super interesting. I love intubations, placing lines, etc.
However, I was never crazy about deliveries. If a patient needs bag mask ventilation or intubation I thought it was interesting. But was not a fan of most deliveries, especially being called for things like shoulder dystocia. Basically I didn’t like going whenever we went and the baby was fine, which I know is dumb because you obviously never know in advance, but still. Also, the feeding/growing part killed me and adjusting O2 by 0.5 liters slowly over 1-3 days also killed me.
I do PICU in a few months. Do you think it would be worthwhile to continue to explore NICU? I have the option to do a NICU away at a busy community hospital in town, so I could get a little different perspective.
Thanks!
Hi, I am applying for NICU fellowship this upcoming cycle. I was wondering if it really matters going to a Level 3 or a Level 4 NICU. Also, I plan on applying pretty broadly all over the country, but was wondering what are some factors that you'd consider more when looking at a program (other than the usual geographic location, research focus, etc). Thank you!