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I am choosing between rad onc and heme onc. I have done rotations in both, and have found in many ways they were more similar than different so I am having a hard time deciding between the two. Both have a similar clinical approach (i.e. see the patient, review imaging/studies, determine if they are a candidate for your therapy, and then follow for side effects and response). I would say that I enjoyed hearing about med onc research more and the med oncs seem to have had more flexible long-term careers (changing area of clinical focus over time), so based on subject matter med onc might have a slight advantage, but I have heard rad onc has a better lifestyle hours-wise.
What are the comparative lifestyles of these two fields as attendings? It was really impossible to tell while on rotation since I did not know what the attendings did when I was not with them, and I was with different attendings every few days. It was also not easy to ask them what the lifestyle is like without looking lazy. I could not tell what the hours of each are. I got the sense that med onc attendings had to come in more in the evening or overnight to admit patients for complications of their cancer or therapy, and that the med oncs had to do 2-3 weeks of inpatient service time per year, which was really busy. Also, most of the med oncs at my institution work 5 days per week but I met some rad oncs that work 3-4 days and are home for one or two days per week (all of these rad oncs had small children, like I hope to have, and physician spouses).
Any insight into med onc vs rad onc call/lifestyle?
What are the comparative lifestyles of these two fields as attendings? It was really impossible to tell while on rotation since I did not know what the attendings did when I was not with them, and I was with different attendings every few days. It was also not easy to ask them what the lifestyle is like without looking lazy. I could not tell what the hours of each are. I got the sense that med onc attendings had to come in more in the evening or overnight to admit patients for complications of their cancer or therapy, and that the med oncs had to do 2-3 weeks of inpatient service time per year, which was really busy. Also, most of the med oncs at my institution work 5 days per week but I met some rad oncs that work 3-4 days and are home for one or two days per week (all of these rad oncs had small children, like I hope to have, and physician spouses).
Any insight into med onc vs rad onc call/lifestyle?