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- Pre-Medical
In a heartbeat.
Despite all the complaining, the radiology pathway is easier than most in medicine, law, and business.
Where is your avatar from?
Fur-sure
In a heartbeat.
Despite all the complaining, the radiology pathway is easier than most in medicine, law, and business.
Radiology residency is much easier than pp radiology. Surgery residency is much more difficult than pp surgery.
Hope your opinion doesn't change once you start your pp job as attending.
Radiology residency is much easier than pp radiology. Surgery residency is much more difficult than pp surgery.
If I wanted to do it again, I would not do medicine again. That was my biggest mistake. It is not worth it by any means. But in medicine, radiology yes.
I only now started to really understand this after starting to moonlight. I don't know yet how PP rads compares to PP surgery, but having done intern year/med school there are certain aspects that are more stressful/more grueling than clinical medicine.
Looking back to MS1 year, I had did not understand (even after being told) the lifelong commitment medicine requires. I was probably a little naive. It becomes your work and #1 hobby for 10+ years during training... and probably for the rest of your life.

That's good, because after 10 years of training, I don't have much of a life outside of medicine
Obviously kidding, but it's a little scary how medicine beats the human out of you.
I have read that little blurb before. You can make any job sound like the most difficult job in the world. Whoever wrote it likely has never had a job outside of college and the immediate jump to med school. In general, work sucks. A medical career draws a volunteer army. No one is forcing us to be here. Period. Truth. This wasn't directed at you, just my general opinion.
I always find it annoying when people say, "Whoever said that has never had a job outside of medicine blah blah blah."
I worked in construction before I came to medical school. Medical school still sucks just as bad as it would have had I not worked construction before coming to medical school. Plenty of people that I'm friends with had 10 year careers before coming to medical school. They still talk about how bad it sucks. Just because someone has a different perspective on the massive amount of suck that is our current job doesn't mean that it sucks any less. I wholeheartedly believe that, while we gain more responsibility and longer/more stressful hours the further along we go, it will continue to get steadily better.
I always find it annoying when people say, "Whoever said that has never had a job outside of medicine blah blah blah."
I worked in construction before I came to medical school. Medical school still sucks just as bad as it would have had I not worked construction before coming to medical school. Plenty of people that I'm friends with had 10 year careers before coming to medical school. They still talk about how bad it sucks. Just because someone has a different perspective on the massive amount of suck that is our current job doesn't mean that it sucks any less. I wholeheartedly believe that, while we gain more responsibility and longer/more stressful hours the further along we go, it will continue to get steadily better.
Now these days with more work, more hours, less pay and more training, I really doubt that for a 20 year old medicine is a good choice.
The problem with medicine is long long years of training which involves some of the best years of your life. Many doctors have not learned how to live. Many hobbies and joys in life are shaped during your teenager years and 20s. Most doctors are studying in these years. As a result, when you are 40 and you make a good money, you don't know how to live and how to enjoy the money.
The other problem with medicine is the end result of what you do. If you see it as an outsider, the end result is not really rewarding.It is not like building a new house and enjoying your production. In most cases, you just prolong the disease or marginally improve the outcome. Still the end point is not promising.
Medicine, due to its long years of training, is like joining Mafia group. Once you join it, there is no way out. After finishing a residency, there is not a lot of ways to get out. Even you are not able to switch fields easily within medicine. This is not the case in most other fields.
I agree that the grass is always greener on the other side. But Medicine is a life long commitment. It has a huge influence on the rest of your life. Let's be honest. Outside medicine, our skills are very limited. Even within medicine, your skills are limited to a very narrow field. A CT surgeon can not work as a family doctor.
Though money is not everything, but it is an important factor. The previous generation of doctors had much less years of training. Medicine was less sub-specialized. The hours were much better in 80s and 90s. And the pay was (much) better at least per case across all fields. Society was more respectful towards doctors. Nevertheless, retired physicians from the previous generation are not sure whether they made a right choice at that time. Now these days with more work, more hours, less pay and more training, I really doubt that for a 20 year old medicine is a good choice.
Exactly what I wish my 20 yo self better understood. Not sure I would have done anything else, however.
meh. 7-5 with occassional call in residency is still 7-5 with occassional call in practice. I'll take the added stress for 6X the salary. Besides, I won't be going home to study for 2 hours in PP like I do now