I am 4 weeks from finishing my surg path fellowship. AP/CP trained at a program with a decent volume and good exposure to a variety of neoplastic/non-neoplastic disease.
Here are the things that I would look for if one were inclined to do a surg path fellowship:
- Independence: I don't think that this can be overstated enough. Pathology is probably one of the only fields in medicine where you can pretty much go through your entire residency and make few, if any critical decisions. You want a fellowship where at the very least you can sign out frozen sections and issue prelim diagnoses to clinicians (i.e. hot seat rotation). Ideally, it would be great to actually sign out cases and develop some degree of confidence. Doing it all over again I would probably prefer the Hopkins model for my surg path fellowship.
- Flexibility: This year should help you "fill in" the gaps of your residency training. Electives are a valuable time to gain extra exposure in areas that you feel particularly weak in.
- Limited grossing: As long as you trained at a moderately busy program, you should feel comfortable with almost every type of specimen. If your residency program was weak in specimen complexity, then I don't think that this applies to you.
- Access to faculty consult material: Many of our faculty receive personal consults which really enhances the experience. You get to see difficult cases and learn how to approach them.
- Variety: I personally like the fact that we see a variety of neoplastic and non-neoplastic disease and that we get exposure to non-tumor biopsies.