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I’ve been following the Google Spreadsheet this year and have refrained from commenting because I do actually believe that it should be a space reserved for current M4s discussing the match. However, there are many instances of people saying “ignore the SDN trolls and listen to your mentor/advisor” and I felt the need to clarify a few things.
Just to get it out of the way - there are definitely a few folks on here who seem to exist only to stir the pot. I’m not entirely sure what the motivation is for those people, as their existence is a true enigma to me. However, they are in the minority, and they usually end up censored or banned.
What was not apparent to me as a medical student, or even as a junior resident, is the fact that Radiation Oncology is so small that it essentially creates High School Drama on a national, professional level. High School Drama, known in these circles as “Academic Politics”, is extraordinarily vicious. There’s actually a formulation for this - Sayre’s Law, which states that “in any dispute the intensity of feeling is inversely proportional to the value of the issues at stake”.
Obviously, this happens in every field in every department across America (and, likely, the planet). However, with RadOnc being one of the smallest specialties with one of the tightest (and worsening) job markets, this issue becomes particularly salient. All these “big names” we discuss on SDN and Twitter - I have personally met and interacted with many of these people in real life over the years. Face-to-face (with a notable exception here and there) they’re all wonderful, personable, and I genuinely enjoy(ed) my time with them.
I guess my thesis with this post: the reason you see such vitriol on SDN, obsequiousness on Twitter, and nebulous platitudes in real life, is that we’re all mired in this game of High School Drama and each of these venues provides a particular outlet for certain energies. However, you should not be quick to ignore any of them out of hand, because they all provide valuable information.
As you approach and absorb these different venues, I would encourage you to keep the following in mind:
SDN: As far as I know, SDN is the only large and anonymous platform where Radiation Oncology is discussed. As such, this will attract mostly negative comments, because it’s probably the only safe space to bring them right now. If you say “I regret going into RadOnc” in real life to colleagues, you will be shunned. You cannot do this. However, SDN is a tremendous resource to actually see the cracks in the shining armor you’re presented as a medical student. It will skew negative, sometimes very negative, but these are real issues. Ignore SDN at your own risk.
Twitter: I actually saw this brought up on the Spreadsheet - Twitter is used in our specialty like how it’s used by the general public. People love attention. Yes, these people REALLY DO want to be considered “influencers”. Thought leaders are a big thing in academics, previously a position attained through traditional means like publishing papers and speaking at conferences. However, for better or for worse, Twitter now presents a way for people to gain influence from the comfort of their cell phones in their offices. Twitter is going to skew very positively. As a side note, that’s why you should REALLY perk up about the job market if the Twitterati are acknowledging issues such as the CMS supervision change. Twitter is where hot-button social issues exist, and where you can learn about what topics you shouldn’t disagree with in real life (i.e. “URMs and women in medicine are a zero sum game, perhaps they should pick other specialties with fewer restrictions than what RadOnc is facing right now”). Ignore Twitter at your own risk.
Real Life: The issue with real life (other than the existential horror), especially as a medical student in an academic setting, is that you’re surrounded by people who have immersed themselves in a particular topic/point of view/etc. I also exist in real life and will frequently broach the issues I see on Twitter and SDN in very non-threatening ways, basically “hey Dr Vice Chair of my Department, I heard about this particular issue, do you have an opinion, I’d like to partake in your esteemed opinion”. Many of these people have no idea what I’m asking about, and just respond with “everything will be fine, you’ll be fine”. Are these people intentionally ignorant? Absolutely not. They’re well established individuals with deep and impressive knowledge about their particular subjects, often tasked with running sections of departments/whole departments/entire cancer centers, etc. As such, there’s really no need for a tenured Professor of Radiation Oncology to concern themselves with issues such as APM or direct vs general supervision. Really, who you should be asking are the people who run the billing section of your department, but I digress. The people who advise medical students are the cream who rise to the top. Through certain events, publications, timing, etc each of them have a story and can teach you very valuable lessons and you SHOULD LISTEN TO THESE PEOPLE. However, few of them have their fingers on the pulse of Healthcare in America, and will default to thinking “everything worked out fine for me, therefore, it will work out fine for you”. Real life mentors provide tremendous value in many areas, ignore them at your own risk.
To boil down my personal experience after nearly two decades in academics:
SDN will skew negative, Twitter will skew positive, and real life will skew based on that person’s life experience and tactfulness.
Nothing should be ignored.
Ignorantia juris non excusat.
Just to get it out of the way - there are definitely a few folks on here who seem to exist only to stir the pot. I’m not entirely sure what the motivation is for those people, as their existence is a true enigma to me. However, they are in the minority, and they usually end up censored or banned.
What was not apparent to me as a medical student, or even as a junior resident, is the fact that Radiation Oncology is so small that it essentially creates High School Drama on a national, professional level. High School Drama, known in these circles as “Academic Politics”, is extraordinarily vicious. There’s actually a formulation for this - Sayre’s Law, which states that “in any dispute the intensity of feeling is inversely proportional to the value of the issues at stake”.
Obviously, this happens in every field in every department across America (and, likely, the planet). However, with RadOnc being one of the smallest specialties with one of the tightest (and worsening) job markets, this issue becomes particularly salient. All these “big names” we discuss on SDN and Twitter - I have personally met and interacted with many of these people in real life over the years. Face-to-face (with a notable exception here and there) they’re all wonderful, personable, and I genuinely enjoy(ed) my time with them.
I guess my thesis with this post: the reason you see such vitriol on SDN, obsequiousness on Twitter, and nebulous platitudes in real life, is that we’re all mired in this game of High School Drama and each of these venues provides a particular outlet for certain energies. However, you should not be quick to ignore any of them out of hand, because they all provide valuable information.
As you approach and absorb these different venues, I would encourage you to keep the following in mind:
SDN: As far as I know, SDN is the only large and anonymous platform where Radiation Oncology is discussed. As such, this will attract mostly negative comments, because it’s probably the only safe space to bring them right now. If you say “I regret going into RadOnc” in real life to colleagues, you will be shunned. You cannot do this. However, SDN is a tremendous resource to actually see the cracks in the shining armor you’re presented as a medical student. It will skew negative, sometimes very negative, but these are real issues. Ignore SDN at your own risk.
Twitter: I actually saw this brought up on the Spreadsheet - Twitter is used in our specialty like how it’s used by the general public. People love attention. Yes, these people REALLY DO want to be considered “influencers”. Thought leaders are a big thing in academics, previously a position attained through traditional means like publishing papers and speaking at conferences. However, for better or for worse, Twitter now presents a way for people to gain influence from the comfort of their cell phones in their offices. Twitter is going to skew very positively. As a side note, that’s why you should REALLY perk up about the job market if the Twitterati are acknowledging issues such as the CMS supervision change. Twitter is where hot-button social issues exist, and where you can learn about what topics you shouldn’t disagree with in real life (i.e. “URMs and women in medicine are a zero sum game, perhaps they should pick other specialties with fewer restrictions than what RadOnc is facing right now”). Ignore Twitter at your own risk.
Real Life: The issue with real life (other than the existential horror), especially as a medical student in an academic setting, is that you’re surrounded by people who have immersed themselves in a particular topic/point of view/etc. I also exist in real life and will frequently broach the issues I see on Twitter and SDN in very non-threatening ways, basically “hey Dr Vice Chair of my Department, I heard about this particular issue, do you have an opinion, I’d like to partake in your esteemed opinion”. Many of these people have no idea what I’m asking about, and just respond with “everything will be fine, you’ll be fine”. Are these people intentionally ignorant? Absolutely not. They’re well established individuals with deep and impressive knowledge about their particular subjects, often tasked with running sections of departments/whole departments/entire cancer centers, etc. As such, there’s really no need for a tenured Professor of Radiation Oncology to concern themselves with issues such as APM or direct vs general supervision. Really, who you should be asking are the people who run the billing section of your department, but I digress. The people who advise medical students are the cream who rise to the top. Through certain events, publications, timing, etc each of them have a story and can teach you very valuable lessons and you SHOULD LISTEN TO THESE PEOPLE. However, few of them have their fingers on the pulse of Healthcare in America, and will default to thinking “everything worked out fine for me, therefore, it will work out fine for you”. Real life mentors provide tremendous value in many areas, ignore them at your own risk.
To boil down my personal experience after nearly two decades in academics:
SDN will skew negative, Twitter will skew positive, and real life will skew based on that person’s life experience and tactfulness.
Nothing should be ignored.
Ignorantia juris non excusat.