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This thread has been very interesting to read.
I have always been interested in doing primary care - I like the idea of the "traditional" doctor - I like knowing a bit about everything, and I like knowing how to take care of common problems. I like the idea of knowing how to take care of the whole body, not just one part. I love the outpatient setting. I enjoy the social issues/psychological issues you have to address in primary care (I know, you all probably think I'm crazy! I actually loved my psych rotation and probably should have picked that). I think primary care is intensely complex and not AT ALL algorithmic - I like the challenge of having to deal with multiple issues and triage them, especially with geriatrics patients.
Having said all that, I was dead set on doing Family Med during 3rd year. Add in the fact that my school has a very well-respected Family Medicine department in an urban location, which seems to be pretty rare.
However, when I started telling everyone I was doing Family Med, I got so many mixed reactions, most of them being negative. People were acting like I was wasting my life away, or making the worst decision of my life. I have to admit, it was hard to not let my ego get in the way.
During fourth year, I made sort of a last-minute switch from FM to IM right before I sent my applications out. I figured this way, I'd have the option of doing primary care or specializing (I didn't really like peds or OB so much anyway). When I started telling people I was doing IM, I got NONE of the negative feedback I got when I used to tell people I was doing FM (even if I still said I was interested in primary care/general medicine - odd!)
I still kept my residency application very primary care-oriented (personal statement, research, and activities all very geared toward primary care). I think programs either loved it or they hated it. I consider myself a competitive applicant for IM (top 3rd of my class, great board scores, etc)... but I got turned down for many interviews ... and I wonder if things might have been different if I had claimed all kinds of love for GI or cards like everyone else in the world does... maybe programs would have thought I would have fit in there better (although I know I probably would not have!). I think the more progressive programs who acknowledge the vast need for PCPs were more impressed with my interest in primary care, though.
I just matched into an IM program I'm happy with and I think is going to be a great fit for me (yay!). I'm not 100% what the future holds. I'm still thinking about primary care, and I do think it would be a good fit for my personality, but I really am trying to keep in mind what everyone has said in this discussion (and in many real-life discussions I've had on this topic)....and it would be a tough choice. I'm also considering endocrine, which I think would appeal to all the things I like - outpatient, whole body, complex issues... and I'm sure the compensation and lifestyle would be a lot better....
Endocrine is not compensated much better than straight IM, although I agree with you that the subject matter is very interesting. There just aren't (m)any procedures. Mostly they focus on thyroid and diabetes, whereas the sex hormone stuff goes to ob/gyn or whoever deals with male sex hormone issues. IF you want to work on zebras, you need to associate with an academic center. There you will have certain people who focus mostly on pituitary or adrenal stuff, which is a little less bread-and-butter than diabetes/thyroid.