Hello,
I am a recently graduated pre-med and I have been seriously pondering whether I should commit to pursuing medicine as a profession. My main fear is learning to step up to the plate and contend with the high stress and responsibility of making life or death decisions, and the potential for having my botched mistakes cause irreparable damage/death to patients. As one progresses through medical school and residency, is he taught how to deal with the responsibility? Were you slowly eased into the high stress and responsibility of an attending as you went through all the hoops?
Regarding myself, I have a solid academic record but in practical situations I feel that I can be absentminded and make careless errors. In college, I was very slow at labs and made stupid mistakes. A rather far-fetched case in point would be from my independent research stint. I was supposed to bring over several test tubes and I didn't notice the test tube rack straight in front of me so I put the test tubes down on the absorbent pad the graduate student was doing his dissection on. This wasn't a huge mistake because I placed them in the test tube rack after he told me to(when I noticed it) but small things like this could have bigger consequences. I know my example is sort of vague but I hope you kind of understand my gist. I am planning on taking two years off to obtain real work experience/lab experience so that I can feel more confident about my practical skills/work ability before committing to medical school.
Based on my research, I've narrowed down to the bare minimum of specialties where the sort of stressors I'm fearing are somewhat lessened are PM&R, Psychiatry and Pathology. I would like to be able to be in a specialty where I won't have to make quick decisions(unless I were absolutely sure my decision was adequate) and where I could bounce off questions with colleagues or seniors if I am unsure of what recourse to take in a given situation. I just want to ensure that I never make a mistake that has severe negative consequences(or at least more of those mistakes than the average attending).
Are my fears overblown? During residency are the residents conditioned to learn the material so that by the time they are an attending mistakes are rare/minimized? I would appreciate any responses and especially if attendings/residents in the three specialties named before could offer me more insight into their respective fields. I was also interested in FM/IM/Peds and was wondering whether those fields still fit my ideal career.
Before I commit to medical school I just want to be certain that there will be a specialty that befits me and despite what everyone says I know that I can never be sure at this stage if medicine is the correct path for me unless I go through with it and see for myself.
Many Thanks in advance,
Darkskies
I am a recently graduated pre-med and I have been seriously pondering whether I should commit to pursuing medicine as a profession. My main fear is learning to step up to the plate and contend with the high stress and responsibility of making life or death decisions, and the potential for having my botched mistakes cause irreparable damage/death to patients. As one progresses through medical school and residency, is he taught how to deal with the responsibility? Were you slowly eased into the high stress and responsibility of an attending as you went through all the hoops?
Regarding myself, I have a solid academic record but in practical situations I feel that I can be absentminded and make careless errors. In college, I was very slow at labs and made stupid mistakes. A rather far-fetched case in point would be from my independent research stint. I was supposed to bring over several test tubes and I didn't notice the test tube rack straight in front of me so I put the test tubes down on the absorbent pad the graduate student was doing his dissection on. This wasn't a huge mistake because I placed them in the test tube rack after he told me to(when I noticed it) but small things like this could have bigger consequences. I know my example is sort of vague but I hope you kind of understand my gist. I am planning on taking two years off to obtain real work experience/lab experience so that I can feel more confident about my practical skills/work ability before committing to medical school.
Based on my research, I've narrowed down to the bare minimum of specialties where the sort of stressors I'm fearing are somewhat lessened are PM&R, Psychiatry and Pathology. I would like to be able to be in a specialty where I won't have to make quick decisions(unless I were absolutely sure my decision was adequate) and where I could bounce off questions with colleagues or seniors if I am unsure of what recourse to take in a given situation. I just want to ensure that I never make a mistake that has severe negative consequences(or at least more of those mistakes than the average attending).
Are my fears overblown? During residency are the residents conditioned to learn the material so that by the time they are an attending mistakes are rare/minimized? I would appreciate any responses and especially if attendings/residents in the three specialties named before could offer me more insight into their respective fields. I was also interested in FM/IM/Peds and was wondering whether those fields still fit my ideal career.
Before I commit to medical school I just want to be certain that there will be a specialty that befits me and despite what everyone says I know that I can never be sure at this stage if medicine is the correct path for me unless I go through with it and see for myself.
Many Thanks in advance,
Darkskies
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