- Joined
- Feb 2, 2006
- Messages
- 153
- Reaction score
- 1
All I heard during my 3rd year of medical school was how awesome MS4 would be. So far this couldn't be further from the truth.
1. I'm working just as many hours as last year. In July I was on a sub-intership in my chosen field. I worked 28 days straight, took q3 call without post call days, and put in 90+ hours a week every week. It was largely self inflicted, but I had no problem with it as the work was rewarding and the attendings noted my work ethic by offering letters unsolicited. However, since then I've been working 60+ in elective rotations not in my field. I've been asked to come in weekends and take call to serve no legitimate purpose to the team. I have been told to sit around and do nothing because "it's too early to send the medical students home yet." I run out of the hospital and dance a jig if I leave by 5PM.
2. The attendings don't have any desire to teach me since I'm not going in to their specialty. It's too late to lie like third year as I've already chosen my field and actually applied. I didn't take off the wall stuff that is totally unrelated, I chose every elective for a reason. There's plenty of stuff I could learn in my current rotation that would help me in my future profession, but apparently my attendings think that sending me off to their office to write up a bunch of disability claim notes is a better use of my tuition money. Even direct questions are often differed for "hold on I have to do xxx first, then we'll talk." I'm still waiting...
3. The ability to direct my own education has been virtually nil. On the first day of my last rotation I was told "here are some things you can do. Let us know what interests you and we'll get you involved." Apparently my requests were misinterpreted as "I'd like to spend every possible waking moment in the clinic." I am applying to a specialty which does virtually no clinic work, and I'd rather not be there. I'm all for helping the team when possible, but lets not act like I move things along faster in the clinic. My attending always asks the same things I do anyway, so in actuality I just slow the pace.
4. 4th year gives us the beloved stress of residency applications, the wonderful cost of driving or flying all over the country for interviews, and the pain of studying for step 2. How exactly is this better than a few shelf exams?
I'm sure I'll get some haterade about how I'm either a worthless medical student, or that I should cherish this time because intern year will be much worse. I don't doubt it will be, but where is this mythical 4th year that allows everyone to decompress before the hellish reality that is residency? I sure haven't seen it.👎
Maybe the spring will be better, but aside from #4 being out of the way, I don't see how things are going to change.🙁
1. I'm working just as many hours as last year. In July I was on a sub-intership in my chosen field. I worked 28 days straight, took q3 call without post call days, and put in 90+ hours a week every week. It was largely self inflicted, but I had no problem with it as the work was rewarding and the attendings noted my work ethic by offering letters unsolicited. However, since then I've been working 60+ in elective rotations not in my field. I've been asked to come in weekends and take call to serve no legitimate purpose to the team. I have been told to sit around and do nothing because "it's too early to send the medical students home yet." I run out of the hospital and dance a jig if I leave by 5PM.
2. The attendings don't have any desire to teach me since I'm not going in to their specialty. It's too late to lie like third year as I've already chosen my field and actually applied. I didn't take off the wall stuff that is totally unrelated, I chose every elective for a reason. There's plenty of stuff I could learn in my current rotation that would help me in my future profession, but apparently my attendings think that sending me off to their office to write up a bunch of disability claim notes is a better use of my tuition money. Even direct questions are often differed for "hold on I have to do xxx first, then we'll talk." I'm still waiting...
3. The ability to direct my own education has been virtually nil. On the first day of my last rotation I was told "here are some things you can do. Let us know what interests you and we'll get you involved." Apparently my requests were misinterpreted as "I'd like to spend every possible waking moment in the clinic." I am applying to a specialty which does virtually no clinic work, and I'd rather not be there. I'm all for helping the team when possible, but lets not act like I move things along faster in the clinic. My attending always asks the same things I do anyway, so in actuality I just slow the pace.
4. 4th year gives us the beloved stress of residency applications, the wonderful cost of driving or flying all over the country for interviews, and the pain of studying for step 2. How exactly is this better than a few shelf exams?
I'm sure I'll get some haterade about how I'm either a worthless medical student, or that I should cherish this time because intern year will be much worse. I don't doubt it will be, but where is this mythical 4th year that allows everyone to decompress before the hellish reality that is residency? I sure haven't seen it.👎
Maybe the spring will be better, but aside from #4 being out of the way, I don't see how things are going to change.🙁