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massage therapy😀
ortho seems pretty "hands on". they use drills and saws.
Aside from surgery; what is the most "hands-on" specialty?
I am coming from an athletic and physical therapy background. Writing MCAT this spring/summer and hopefully entering med school in a year.
I would like to know, what is the most similar specialty to my background as AT/PT, in terms of working with my hands and helping people to rehab? Do sport medicine doctors actually get to do a lot of "hands-on" stuff?
Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation....PM&R
Pm&r
So I'm looking the bios of some random faculty in PM&R in different schools and I see that they work in neuromuscular disease, amputation, SCI.
So is it safe to say that PM&R docs work with physical disease while Sport Med docs work with athletes? So as a sport med doc I would be treating/training sports injuries only and sending a patient with muscular dystrophy to the PM&R doc?
What I would really appreciate is if someone could maybe just take me through the "typical day" in the life of a PM&R vs Sport Med doc.
I have contacted a few in my area and hope that someone will be willing to let me shadow or ask questions etc.
Thanks!
Can someone explain the difference between PM&R and sport medicine?
In terms of training, I hear that for sports med, you go into family residency then do a specialization in PM&R. For PM&R do you go into PM&R residency?
Hand surgery.
(it's surgery but I had to do it...)
Aside from surgery; what is the most "hands-on" specialty?
I am coming from an athletic and physical therapy background. Writing MCAT this spring/summer and hopefully entering med school in a year.
I would like to know, what is the most similar specialty to my background as AT/PT, in terms of working with my hands and helping people to rehab? Do sport medicine doctors actually get to do a lot of "hands-on" stuff?
massage therapy😀