Well, I guess maybe count me as the only one who never even considered radiology. Don't like it at all. They are similar in some ways, I grant you, but I don't think they are that similar.
I wasn't really turned off by radiology being competitive. While it is nice that pathology residencies are not as hard to get, that is not really a factor in my decisionmaking. I just don't like the lifestyle of a radiologist. Sitting in a dark room, squinting at images, seeing things but never being that sure what they actually represent. I know, many radiologists say they can make an exact diagnosis on many scans, but I just don't think it's the same. They certainly help out clinicians a lot, don't get me wrong there. Very vital. Radiologists also have to learn to do too many procedures, a turnoff for me, which is only going to increase. Plus that whole prelim year garbage.
It's hard to explain. Especially when I am hungry. I just don't like it. Pathology has the attraction of seeing things at a cellular level. I think it sort of comes down to what type of person you are. Radiologists will insist until they are blue in the face that what they do is more challenging, more intellectually stimulating, more clinically relevant, and more subtle. Pathologists will insist equally vehemently the same things, only that pathology is the superior field. So who knows.
I like radiologists, I just find the field stultifyingly dull. Is that a shadow? Is that a lesion or a vessel? Well, let's compare it to the previous. No previous? Well, let's repeat it. Still there? Let's get a cat scan. I find radiology to have even more pattern recognition than pathology. It gives me a headache too. Every chest xray and cat scan seems basically the same, you have to hunt for the differences. Every path slide, on the other hand, tells a story, has marvelous architecture, and tells you a lot about function and disease. You may have to hunt hard to find disease, but it seems more interesting to me than grading shades of gray. At least, I think so. Some would say all path slides look the same. WRONG! There's something to learn in every one, whether it is about structure, differing normal variants, or staining patterns.
I would probably be WRONG! to say that all chest xrays and cat scans are the same. Fine, I'm WRONG! Obviously, they are not.
Eventually they have to get a biopsy anyway for many things. That's the place I want to be.