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Hello everyone!
I've found myself more and more interested in completing an endo residency over my years of practice. I'll put together as much info as I can, in hopes of obtaining answers or guidance to start my endo journey.
First, I've always given high respect to endodontists, and their ability to treat some of the most complicated cases found in the dental field. I always tell my patients, on one hand you have dentistry, the other hand you have endodontics. I tell them it is very difficult to successfuly complete most endodontic cases, and if there is anyone on earth capable of achieving this high level of care they deserve, it would be an endodontist. I tell this to them sort of like, would you see your regular physician for heart surgery? Of course, this is explained to my patients as I get their endo referral form ready. I strongly feel that if you can perform very high quality endodontic treatment, then you could do anything in dentistry with high quality.
My background:
-Graduated, and live in Texas
-I've been out of school practicing for 3 years
-Have practiced in many different style settings of dentistry - medicaid, high pedo volume, high end cosmetics, family practice, traveling dentist for specialty procedures.
-(not that this may matter for residency purposes) I've been a very high producer, while enjoying very high case acceptance % in private practice. I also do this following a moral/ethical code, and strive hard to never "overdiagnose" or cross any unacceptable boundaries in dentistry.
-Find myself constantly reading dental literature & forums for gain of a higher dental education.
-Graduated in bottom half of my class
-Part I and II board scores around an 80
-No research completed
-didn't excel in didactic courses, but did excel in all aspects of practicing general dentistry. outstanding clinical grades, quick to complete required credits, etc..
-I sort of found a balance between home life, exercise, and dental school that worked well for me. This did not work out the best for my grades.
I'm curious, and would appreciate any feedback here.
-What are my chances of getting in to an endo residency?
-What could I do to improve my chances of getting in to an endo residency?
-Am I just out of luck, and stand no chance of getting in?
-Would joining military give me a route to residency if other methods could not?
At the end of the day, I could continue on owning my own office(s), do well in life, retire early, and relax on the beach. OR, I could turn my burning desire to learn higher quality endo in to a career path that I may ultimately find more rewarding to me personally on a daily basis. This may sound cheesy, but if I were to come home every day knowing I completed many "beast like" Surgical, or Non Surgical endodontic treatments, I feel strongly that I would feel more accomplished in life. I don't want you to think RCTs is my only focus, no, I am highly interested in to study of the dental pulp tissue, and all aspects related to understanding and treating it. Dental pulp and root canal systems are soo complexed, they really capture my attention and cause me to want to master this study.
Please let me know your thoughts, directions I should look (out of state/in state, any contacts I should make, etc.
Thanks for reading this 🙂
I've found myself more and more interested in completing an endo residency over my years of practice. I'll put together as much info as I can, in hopes of obtaining answers or guidance to start my endo journey.
First, I've always given high respect to endodontists, and their ability to treat some of the most complicated cases found in the dental field. I always tell my patients, on one hand you have dentistry, the other hand you have endodontics. I tell them it is very difficult to successfuly complete most endodontic cases, and if there is anyone on earth capable of achieving this high level of care they deserve, it would be an endodontist. I tell this to them sort of like, would you see your regular physician for heart surgery? Of course, this is explained to my patients as I get their endo referral form ready. I strongly feel that if you can perform very high quality endodontic treatment, then you could do anything in dentistry with high quality.
My background:
-Graduated, and live in Texas
-I've been out of school practicing for 3 years
-Have practiced in many different style settings of dentistry - medicaid, high pedo volume, high end cosmetics, family practice, traveling dentist for specialty procedures.
-(not that this may matter for residency purposes) I've been a very high producer, while enjoying very high case acceptance % in private practice. I also do this following a moral/ethical code, and strive hard to never "overdiagnose" or cross any unacceptable boundaries in dentistry.
-Find myself constantly reading dental literature & forums for gain of a higher dental education.
-Graduated in bottom half of my class
-Part I and II board scores around an 80
-No research completed
-didn't excel in didactic courses, but did excel in all aspects of practicing general dentistry. outstanding clinical grades, quick to complete required credits, etc..
-I sort of found a balance between home life, exercise, and dental school that worked well for me. This did not work out the best for my grades.
I'm curious, and would appreciate any feedback here.
-What are my chances of getting in to an endo residency?
-What could I do to improve my chances of getting in to an endo residency?
-Am I just out of luck, and stand no chance of getting in?
-Would joining military give me a route to residency if other methods could not?
At the end of the day, I could continue on owning my own office(s), do well in life, retire early, and relax on the beach. OR, I could turn my burning desire to learn higher quality endo in to a career path that I may ultimately find more rewarding to me personally on a daily basis. This may sound cheesy, but if I were to come home every day knowing I completed many "beast like" Surgical, or Non Surgical endodontic treatments, I feel strongly that I would feel more accomplished in life. I don't want you to think RCTs is my only focus, no, I am highly interested in to study of the dental pulp tissue, and all aspects related to understanding and treating it. Dental pulp and root canal systems are soo complexed, they really capture my attention and cause me to want to master this study.
Please let me know your thoughts, directions I should look (out of state/in state, any contacts I should make, etc.
Thanks for reading this 🙂
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