I know you’re specifically not asking someone who went into GP who didn’t do an internship, but one thing I’m really glad I did was took the salary differential and put it back into CE that actually would make a difference for me. Things like dental CE, Ultrasound CE, and surgery CE with multiple days of wetlabs cost $2000-3000 each PLUS lodging and travel. If you’re going into gp, being comfortable with soft tissue surgery and dentistry is super beneficial and unfortunately that is where most internships are deficient. Pair that with a rescue that will let you gain experience with those skills in conjunction with CE, and you’ll be way ahead in those areas in 1 year compared with someone who has just completed an internship. Remember that is the more important comparison. Not a new grad straight out of school vs. someone coming out of an internship. It’s where you would be 1 yr out in practice vs. where you would be straight out of internship.
Now the important thing is finding a practice to work at that will both help build you into the clinician you want to be AND support good quality of life as well as quality of medicine. There are so many horrible employers out there. Finding a place you’re happy at is kinda rare esp for your first job. But that’s going to be the same regardless of whether or not you do an internship. And there are a lot of bad internships out there as well. If you end up with a bad one on either side, you’ll probably regret your decision but I’m not sure that’s a fair way to think about it.
At the end of the day, it’s a matter of what you want out of your first year. If you’re terrified of unblocking a cat, managing a dyspneic animal, or sewing up a laceration without having done that in a setting where ultimately someone else is responsible for you, then maybe an internship is for you. Though seriously, as long as you’re not at a job where you are left to sink or swim and there are other doctor support, it’s super doable. Says someone who was left to sink or swim in these situations and still did fine. But if your goal is to be the most self sufficient gp in a shorter period of time, then you may be better off going straight into gp (preferably at a high quality multi-doctor practice where there are always multiple doctors in the building). Much of the stuff you’ll struggle with in gp are not skills you learn in an internship. The chronic diseases and multiple chronic diseases and managing client expectations for these things. The never ending skin/ear/GI/geriatric stuff that sounds mundane but is really an art. And surgery procedures.
And the money isn’t just about the salary differential that first year either. By the time you’ve been in practice for a year, you will have your groove and will have built a clientele, and will have the capacity to book surgical cases, so that year two is going to be much more productive. That can be significant. Though an internship trained gp first year out may be a little more efficient than a new grad, it’s going to take a while to build that clientele unless you’re working at a clinic that is over capacity. And if you want to spend extra money on CE, and you don’t negotiate that with your employer ahead of time, you may not be able to afford it. You don’t necessarily need to go to these CEs, but they can really expedite your skill building.