Is Pediatric Hematology and Oncology DO friendly?
Yes I think slightly above average will get you a Peds residency easySo would you say my chances are quite high as far as going DO?
For pediatric heme/onc, you do peds residency then heme onc fellowship.Yes I believe so - for heme onc, I believe you go into IM (quite DO friendly) and then you do a fellowship in that speciality
Rad onc is a whole other story and tough to get as an MD or DO
As for how difficult it is to subspecialize once in IM as heme onc opposed to cards opposed endo - I honestly don't know
Okay that makes senseFor pediatric heme/onc, you do peds residency then heme onc fellowship.
So would you say my chances are quite high as far as going DO?
For pediatric heme/onc, you do peds residency then heme onc fellowship.
I have read this before - it still blows my mind a little that doing a fellowship and being more specialized in something earns you less money. I ran into the same information, when I realized that being a general IM vs an Endocrinologist (fellowship post IM residency) means less pay for the latter. Crazy.No. I would say nothing about your chances at a fellowship because that is almost a decade into the future. If you turn into an average DO student then yeah your chances are good for IM, as for fellowship that will depend less on your DO degree and more on your residency, research, connections, aka stuff you have none of right now. NRMP has a charting outcomes for the 2018 fellowship match if you want some hard data. It has specific numbers for osteopathic graduates.
this. Many people don't realize all these peds fields are fellowships after peds and not something else for some reason. They are also generally not super competitive as from what I've been told its usually a pay cut to do a fellowship after peds.