Do you regret emergency medicine reddit Alcoholics, mental health people, FTCs, URIs, Friday night dumps from the nursing home etc. I am not going to fix your chronic pain, be able to get you into outpatient rehab, troubleshoot all your chronic meds, etc. I hear the benefits are good, hours are good and the overall job If you have a drive to want to save the sick animals and are able to understand that you can't save them all then go ahead and be a vet. I canada we do family medicine for 2 years then 1 year ER. Which is why I said it only add~2-3 years if you end up not wanting to do research at the end. Do you think med peds people suck at peds and IM?? The key is finding a practice environment where you can do both to stay fresh. Rather than enlist, you could get a job working at a VA Emergency room. Figuring out risk based E/M levels was very difficult and took me 6 months to a year to be I was so bored I became depressed. You can't ask others opinions because we won't know how you handle stressful sad situations. I keep thinking one more year. It’s the lack of control over my day to day life. Also, Wiki EM is a thing too. You have to do what you want to do and not let others pressure you into another specialty, even with flattery. But nothing you can’t pick up with enough practice. I love the social and teamwork aspects of Emergency medicine. I feel like everyone ik regrets it a couple years in wishing they had chosen a specialty with more normal/regular hours so they can spend more time with their family or have a more regular I’m currently an emergency medicine attending and I regret my choice. If you switched into medicine, do you regret it? Or do you feel like no one told you just how shitty it is to go through med school, residency, and fellowship? Also it's funny to me (as someone still in their 20s) how Reddit thinks that once you hit 30 your days of adventure are over lol. I’m 62, a retired Navy officer and current government civilian. Regret - the grief when a child dies is overwhelming. If you want to do it go for it, don’t let Reddit comments dissuade you. 93 GPA. We get bitched at for customer satisfaction scores and are Unless you’re working in a rural area, a family med doc is going to be seeing the low acuity patients while the ER docs get all the procedures and traumas. for me, I am glad i did EM as it seems like the only residency i woulda been able to sit through, and i know i can do even urgent care or CC later - seems like more of the actual medicine so far. It’s the thankless work, the constant berating, the lack of recognition when you do things right but the constant criticism when you do something wrong. Kudos to my classmates who chose medicine later in life because I also wouldn't do that personally. In the ER you are getting all those calls from every ambulance at the same time. Introduce yourself and let them know you are interested in learning/doing procedures. You I have zero regrets and love what I do (general surgery training, but breast only practice now, w heavy emphasis My main regret is going into medicine at all. It’s more fucked up than anyone can imagine. Med school will make you miss out on a lot more than undergrad but if this is what you truly want to do, then it's 100% worth it. On the contrary, seeing the unwavering dedication of front-line responders Picture yourself in the emergency department in desperate need of acute care. You have to do what you want to do and not let others pressure you I started 3rd year leaning towards Emergency Medicine. So I had the chance to compare myself The only time in medical school where I was pretty down and actively had to tell myself that “this will all be worth it” was spring of M2. For example, I told my (competitive) subspecialty doctor she responded with 110 votes, 145 comments. r/doctors is a community for doctors of all levels of training and experience. No 33 votes, 118 comments. Sort by: /r/emergencymedicine is a subreddit for healthcare providers in the emergency setting to discuss their encounters and find ways to improve their knowledge of various parts 1- no(you can always learn in classes, it makes retaining knowledge better, what you gonna do for 6-8hrs day) 2-yes (usmle and other things are easier) 3- After mbbs ( while PG you will be paid according to state norms) 4- Every human take time-out Whatever you do in life is hard, ppl working for google work 10hrs. It's a pretty good school but owing 7 years after training is a huge commitment. You think you're involved with a normal high functioning professional so even if things don't work you'll just separate like mature adults, then a few months later you realize they're a narcissistic sociopath. Fast pace/procedures M4 applying into internal medicine right now. But I am emergency medicine so my job has always been hard Hospital administrators that only have RN training or worse yet just a business degree, telling you how to practice medicine, that you are too expensive and constantly reminding you that you are 100% replaceable. I learned from this excellent lecture on time management (randy pausch (of last lecture fame) to say “I have a 1 am shift and work a 4p. If you don’t like medicine then don’t do medicine but this is pretty rad. I was having a beer with a friend last night and she was telling me about how her job is pushing so hard to get all their PCP’s to order unnecessary labs that then get sent to the facility’s labs and refer everyone to every specialist they can think of in their organization. Wait until you see a proper anaesthetic emergency before you rule it out, because that's why we love the job. Security. No call, barely 40 hours per week. I don't regret going into medicine but that's because I am not money motivated. We need to get yall to do an AMA on r/medicine or in medicine, however, I quickly realized that I have many other non-medical interests. Highway engineer. You have to look deeply at yourself and see if you would be able to handle these things. Find one and sit down with them (not in the hospital) and see if you are like them, or if you wish you were like them. Right now I have three jobs and I'm going to be pulling in pretty close to $300,000 per year. I don't regret my journey or anything, but I wouldn't do this again. The PA seems to be carrying the same amount of stress as the doctor. Everyone is welcome, but you must have a medical degree (MD, DO, MBBS, MDCM, etc. That goes both ways in this situation! If you feel like you're forcing a full wedding because of media ideals, you might regret spending the money. and accept the offer amongst all the negativity (this was right in the middle of the ACP drama as well) was that like you, I love emergency medicine. How are you supposed to buy a car without having driven your top two choices? And also, trauma's arent as cool as people think. One of my older colleagues joked to me privately that emergency medicine is the only profession in which you can feel more unsure the longer you practice it. Since getting yours removed, have you experienced worse problems/complications as a result? Or are you doing much better and I never suffered from gallbladder attacks, my pain came on acutely and I had emergency removal. Work with good people. Emergency Medicine. and like medicine or dental, you will watch your friends from college start their real lives while you are chained to a EM resident here. Medicine made me so unhealthy in all aspects. The question is: should you really be an emergency physician? Like FR. Probably still could have done that even with my previous undergrad shenanigans and finished residency at 32 or 33 How many premeds do you remember that dropped out after orgo. So my friends in other various careers from highschool graduated years ago. Even within my family, a lot of people regret choosing medicine. 8 is Workplace mistreatment is associated with burnout, but not career choice regret, among emergency medicine residents. The administrative side is way worse than civilian side and the medicine in a non-wartime tempo is pretty weak. The sub is currently going dark based on a vote by users. Absolutely do not enter medicine at those numbers. Challenging. Maybe just my trust, but it was very anti-doctor (HUGE push for expanded non-medical practitioners, with an aggressive and spiteful clinical director-I was one of 2 in a small sub-speciality, when I had to have several months off for surgery, my colleague was told 'we can't increase your PAs because there's no proof you're You won't have more time, and you shouldn't let med school become your life. In that case you will absolutely regret not getting that education. I work in emergency medicine. Efforts to address workplace mistreatment may improve emergency medicine residents’ professional well-being. And should you go into and EM residency, really research the town you want to work in some day. In med school one of my psych attendings was a reformed trauma surgeon. Likely by November. Or check it out in the app stores Do you regret being a firefighter? (Career guys) I was hesitant to get my EMT and Paramedic because I had no real interest in emergency medicine; once I did, I worked for a private ambulance company for 5 years before getting the call I don't think there's a wrong choice or one that automatically brings up regret. Once it’s even approved (In 4-8 business months) the restrictions are draconian. Reply reply caked1393 • yes and yes lmao imagine everyone else works 9 to 5, gets weekends off, can get leaves, and aren't constantly berated r/emergencymedicine: /r/emergencymedicine is a subreddit for healthcare providers in the emergency setting to discuss their encounters and find ways FOAMed Blogs Well, I came from an arts background with absolutely no medical or anatomy knowledge. Caveat - if you aren’t good with your hands, you may find it quite frustrating. If I had to do it all over again I wouldn't have applied to any private DO schools. Reality can can really screw you over, sometimes. Do you guys consider us dumber than Everyone eats little pieces of shit from somewhere once you get out of residency, thanks to a shitty healthcare You don’t go to medical school so you can be a resident, you do it for what comes after. I was mentally prepared for medicine, but it feels like it has physically destroyed me. You can do that too You do an admission and they’re like 90 years old. Be sure to talk to everyone when you start your shift. Been pretty much dead set on EM since working as an ER tech during premed, but lately Well most times nowadays, you have to do a fellowship to get hired at an academic center, especially if you 10 votes, 23 comments. For us, younger people work more nights I voted no, I don’t regret it, but I’m not sure that I’d encourage my kids to go into it. The only problem is that it didn’t love me back. Rural ER doc here (family med). How many nurses/techs did you hear say they would’ve gone to med school if it wasn’t for xyz but you know it’s because they just don’t have what it takes. Been an RN 12. I couldn’t do it all day everyday. The sub will be back up I have a masters in CS, left my career to become a doctor, I am 1 year away from residency and am about Ex-residents and less broke. If you want to do surgery, be a surgeon. Every day is busier than the last. It does not sound like the former regret applies to you and you have some control over whether the latter one does. I've read all these stories about never-ending diarrhea and permanent, drastic diet changes, and I think I'm freaking myself out and I don't regret going into medicine but that's because I am not money motivated. It's honestly so boring to watch compared to surgery. I think wanting to graduate a PhD at 28 vs graduating an MD/PhD at 30 makes no different. Pros: Sick patients with lots of autonomy. I am doing one in internal medicine right now. Reply You take medicine seriously but not so seriously it defines who you are as a person, that way when shit's hard you don't take it as so much of a slight to your existence and life choices I think. Reply reply Get the Reddit app Scan this QR code to download the app now. Not if you mean Listen to some podcasts if you commute. -Doctors are people. Medicine is interesting and enjoyable but it has a bad work life balance. Yeah, you can still buy additional insurance if you want a single room in the hospital or want to be treated by the head doctor only. I hope you receive therapy If I had to choose again, now, I'd do Anesthesia. I'm lucky in my shop I can work as much or little as I want. And even if you work in a rural area, you’re not going to have the training to handle shit hitting the fan. No. What does anyone want in a career? Perhaps some of the following. Also, #1. You have to moonlight to maintain your skills, however the paperwork to do this is impressive even by government standards. O. That balance is much more important than you think. You can’t know if you truly like it until you’re years in, which by then it’s to late. If you plan your schedule properly, you can do some of the fun things you've enjoyed or never got to try. NP/PAs are going to be equally untrained to do pediatrics and family medicine, but FM/IM pays more. ) from a medical school registered in the You will never, ever regret getting an education; but if you skip it and get into EMS it may become less rosy in a few years and you'll want to get out but have nothing else to fall back on. If you go to the Amazon pages for all the editions you can see they’re about 5 years apart so we’re due. Who knows what 20 votes, 31 comments. By going into medicine you will miss out on a lot of potential opportunities and investments and you will have a huge opportunity cost. Often with I had followed that path. But if you end up not wanting to practice medicine, then you can go into industry or post-doc after and not do a residency. The adrenaline rush, the fast pace, it’s great, but after a while it’s a crash and burn. I missed talking to people, treating something. Those surgeons will understand and help you evaluate your liver concerns. Who knows, maybe in the next 10 years medicine will find a way to allow us to live healthily to 120. You are a young man/woman, please do not do this to yourself. Or less copay for dental work etc. Lot of flexibility in General Surgery- almost as much as EM. They are cutting hours and pay as the market gets saturated. I'm old and can see the end of my days . "Do you regret not saving more money when you were younger to do the things later in life?" CSCareerQuestions protests in solidarity with the developers who made third party reddit apps. I also started as a profee coder for emergency rooms, so I jumped in the deep end. If you do a combined residency and get board certified in both, you can be competent in both. As consultant I work 2 clinical shifts and one SPA a week The personality disorder thing is the real issue. I’ll be applying EM next match (2024). Get the Reddit app Scan this QR code to download the app now. If you want to medically manage, go Say you are doing cardiology, you can split it to valve disorders and cardiomyopathy instead of doing random questions from all of cardiology. I’m working hard enough as a resident without carrying the weight of new / travel nurses. Ask how they like what they do, and look for an honest response, the good and especially the bad. But honestly, I can't think of a realistic career that's actually better - one that offers you impact, job stability, interesting work, high pay, etc. And, I love the diagnostics of path”. I finished undergrad with internship + offer from top tier investment bank with a base salary (8 years ago, as a grad), that is still higher than my PGY4 salary as a Med Reg. You may even have multiple codes going on at the same time in the ER! Rads averages 50ish hours a week in attendinghood with ample vacation time, but you'll be busy. Never be afraid to call them with a legitimate concern about a patient. For the most part, I have viewed mistakes as an opportunity to learn and hopefully help someone else down the road. Only do medicine if you really really want to dedicate yourself to it and are willing to Their jobs are boring, but they have good work life balance. I’m not sure when to stop even though I also think I have enough. The looming anxiety from step 1, the constant studying, never being able to fully relax because there If you don't love and embrace minor care and Inexplicable Care (TM) you won't be a good fit for Emergency Medicine. With that being said, you still can do the things you enjoy but in moderation. If I wanted to, I could take off 1-12 months (without pay). Once medicine no longer becomes enjoyable (see the current situation), then there's really no reason to do it as a career and that I don’t regret it. You will do those things as an ER tech and you will do them more often than being an EMT on the bus. As a physician however, not only do you learn information about 10,000 times in depth It has to be worth it to you! I also regret not doing med school and am carving a path to pursue it in the next few years - I’ll be early 40s by the time I’d even optimistically be starting residency. I think if you force something that feels really antithetical to your values, you might regret that. So the low pay of pediatrics sometimes I do but then I think about all the opportunities there are to get into a company for an accounting job then pivot to a different role like HR, marketing, consulting, internal roles at Big 4, or specialized divisions within a certain industry like real estate or health care. that are 9-5 in the corporate world where you work hard for 2 hours and then you're stuck in meetings/chatting/browsing reddit/shopping/eating for the next 6 The further in life one goes the more things you potentially regret. I'm also a big fan of the humanitarian possibilities in the Navy (USS Comfort/Mercy) or the ability to do the cold weather training with the marines. Worst decision I made in my life haha. It's hard to avoid nights and weekends as an attending without a substantial paycut. I think FM is more in demand than EM in Canada, at least in Ontario/Alberta. Saying no is hard in academics. The first I really do love my job. so not remembering all of those details doesn't really have much of an impact. You dont have or get to take many choices. I don’t recommend Uworld until clinical year, or if you have a general surgery/emergency medicine/pediatrics/internal medicine type classes your last Neonatal resuscitation is magic and you truly save lives. I enjoy it. Veterinary is you are on your fucking own to learn m8. I listen to EM Cases, IBCC, a bunch of PEM podcasts, etc. I wanted something stable, high earning, and that had a tangible positive impact. maybe a mix of Emergency medicine is the hardest profession. . 24 votes, 65 comments. Adds value to the lives of others/the world. true I feel the same as the previous commenters, would do path again but not medicine. PGY-14 EM If it's right for you, emergency medicine is amazing. 29 votes, 43 comments. Having all that said, i wouldnt want my future kids to be dentists lol - i know double standards First job (privately owned ortho): 4 weeks PTO, 1 week CME Second job (privately owned family medicine): 3 weeks PTO, 1 week CME - after 1 year with practice increased to 4 weeks PTO, 1 week CME - after 5 years (I think) increased and topped at 5 weeks PTO, 1 week CME (these PTO levels were set in stone, didn't matter how much experience you had coming in) As someone not "fresh out of undergrad," you would have a valued perspective to offer younger students. I voted no, I don’t regret it, but I’m not sure that I’d encourage my kids to go into it. Medicine is a lifestyle, not a career. The key trade-off is this: Apart from Acute Care Surgery (the EM of surgery, heh), surgeons are responsible for their patients and their referral base. Or check it out in the app stores Do you regret applying family medicine? Share Add a Comment. Ask about percentage of adult students when you research programs. I’m a cog in the machine, but I don’t do any of that stuff anymore. none seemed to A place thats super focused on rvu’s and getting patients dispoed seems to burn out more than a place that actually lets you practice emergency medicine. I am drawn to acute settings and the idea of having the skills and knowledge to manage patients with a large range of pathologies and acuities on a shift-work Don't let standardized exam practices taken on a given day define a lifelong relationship with a dynamic field like emergency medicine. You do you girl. Even when you get into med school you’re not guaranteed to get into a high paying specialty. When you're in residency that cares for you and you've worked hard for them during residency, they will go to the ends of earth to help you I still subscribe and wouldn't change it for the world. I had grown into that role after graduating from college It does not sound like the former regret applies to you and you have some control over whether the latter one does. Do you ever regret not becoming a doctor? I am 45 and spent some time this year wondering if I shouldn't go to med school rather than PA school. At the time, I had been in medical school for only about eight months, having recently transitioned out of a consulting job in the financial services industry. A lot of people are passionate about engineering while in school but the "you won't actually use 95% of that" is a meme because it's true. One way referral and “you I hear you. As a resident you can also do Indeed. Please bear in mind, that many countries that have universal healthcare still have private options, so you aren’t entirely without choice. Do you have any regrets about taking the NP route? Career Advice You DO NOT need to become an NP. I do not regret my choice as a vet cause I work in smth else now rather than clinics (its not worth salary wise). Just curious to learn what other disciplines think of us. I finished undergrad with internship + offer from top tier investment bank with a base salary (8 years ago, as a grad), that is still higher Yes to all this! Seriously the glue! I'm 10 years in and have no regrets, I love EM. There are also many, many adult students who pursue graduate education, so you would not be the only person over 25 in the room. I went HPSP and would do it again, but I've been lucky. I've been cheated on and my ex really didn't give a shit. Whenever I tell people I'm going into internal medicine I get non-encouraging responses, judgement, and feel as though I am looked down upon. Education is so expensive that once you’re in it, you can’t get out. You likely won’t see high acuity traumas but you do see a lot of advanced crazy medical pathology depending where you are. I also do not like working with patients. 223K subscribers in the Residency community. You’re the one that has to make that decision. If you don’t get into a high-paying specialty, you generally get paid about $250,000 Find what you hate and don’t do that. It would be the worst job in medicine if you worked every week (excluding the sub You will do those things as an ER tech and you will do them more often than being an EMT on the bus. If you want a decent I canada we do family medicine for 2 years then 1 year ER. Like yes 30 is definitely different than 20 but “Do you regret going into medicine?” read a text from a former co-worker within the first few weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic. Love the rural medicine cases and critical care mailbag! You might have your nights/evenings stacked together, but other than that can be somewhat random. Every day we’re told to do more with less. You may even have multiple codes going on at the same time in the ER! EM resident here. People are starting to realize it sucks. . We also need happy surgeons who don't live a life of regret. And by the time you get to residency you don’t really have much choice about whether or not you want to do it, it’s just the circumstance you find yourself in unless you I do. r/medicine is a virtual lounge for physicians and other medical professionals from around the world to talk about the latest advances, controversies, ask questions of each other, have a laugh, or share a difficult moment. Our dean was a reformed OBGYN who went back to do psych residency after a personal tragedy. I hated clinic, admissions, discharges, consults and disposition management. We don't do EM rotations until 4th year (so still haven't really experienced it), but on paper, EM seems like a great match for me. Do I regret having to explain to No. If they want fast, friendly and accurate medical care, they need to properly staff, but when they cut scribes, unit clerks, nursing staff, we can't pick up the slack. I know that medicine as a whole is risky and you do the best you can based on what you know and that all specialties carry some risk, but - correct me if I'm wrong, because I'm Do you regret your decision AT ALL becoming an Optometrist? You get to talk to people all day and they are generally happy to see you. ) but other comments have described those na. EM is overall treated well in residency, there’s still great job opportunities, and plenty of options if you do burn out. I know this because he told my friends (and his friends) that he didn't regret it. Know what groups work at which hospitals and I would think long and hard before deciding to go work for a CMG. Know that the Emergency Room is only an Emergency Room like maybe 20-30% of the time. Very few emergency or life and death situations compared to other specialties. The only regrets I have is occasionally remembering how cool being in the OR is. If you really do love the field of emergency medicine - and that includes the roughly 80-95% nonemergent/homeless hungry/psych/primary care visits - then yeah 12-14 would be fine. Unfiltered. If you are lucky, you quickly check in with a triage nurse who takes your vitals and registers your My career in EMS has been full of ups and downs. Emergency Medicine Abstracts is such a great way to stay up-to-date and dissecting papers/methodology discussion is priceless. The best ones will help you understand why they ordered something if you are unsure and you ask. do you regret pursuing cs (i assume you are based on your Get the Reddit app Scan this QR code to download the app now. Sort by: Best There are a few PA turned MDs on reddit. 5 years and was coming close to capping out my pay. You will know a lot about medicine as a PA and will continue to learn throughout your life, but you won’t be equivalent or know as much as an MD. You’re not guaranteed to get in the med school. Shadowing is the closest you will get to knowing what life in medicine is like before actually practicing. I regret seriously. Those surgeons will understand and Medicine is a great career and I feel lucky to be a physician. I'm getting better at this now but the first two years I basically didn't do anything other than study and I don't even have great grades to Get the Reddit app Scan this QR code to download the app now. Autopilot the entire day. If you want to medically manage, go Internal med here, got my job in primary care with a starting salary of 180k before I’m board certified. You'll drown in a sea of regret if you think medicine is the way. If your aim is to get rich, this is not that journey. I would have gone for MLS straight out of high school rather than not knowing what to do for several years before stumbling onto MLT. But you can’t choose every path. My story thankfully didn't progress too far; decided on digital forensics in high school, went through a horrible university experience while learning networking, IT security, IT resource planning/management, hacking, said digital forensics as well as some other topics, looked for a wide array of such jobs for half a year before realising I Seriously though it is due out soon if you look at past releases. 7 percent. But a resident IS still a practicing doctor, they are just still in training and have not earned the title or benefits of a fully trained attending. Depression, anxiety, GERD, hair loss, weight gain, weight loss, possibly post infectious IBSnot to mention There are pros and cons for all branches of medicine and it's different horses for different courses. Medicare reimbursing less for a case than I 49 votes, 129 comments. Just pick something you find challenging and a work environment you like. If all you want to We have an unhealthy population gorging themselves on sugar-rich foods, developing preventable diseases like type II diabetes with expensive complications (kidney failure, heart attack, stroke, blindness, etc. It’s the extreme debt that keeps me trapped in medicine. It’s a great program. It’s nothing about the job, it’s everything around it. Also, though I'm in another field, returning and trying again despite failure/adversity shows me honest dedication, self-improvement, and other things that make me believe in the person. Is it a good career choice to pursue becoming an emergency medicine consultant in England? What do you think about the quality Ah yeah, logic like so: If bloods/urine abnormal need surgical review ?organ-itis. So many obstacles for DO students that you may not see until clinical years. I responded with, “I never said I wasn’t good with people, I said it’s draining and I don’t enjoy it. Or check it out in the app stores like long term unemployment, a family emergency, or a medical crisis. Go with a highly qualified and experienced surgeon and hospital and it's more likely that you won't regret it. I work in a super-low acuity ER now. Terrible decision. I spent 4 years as an agency locum middle grade-no regrets. It’s easy for us to overlook this but not 由於此網站的設置,我們無法提供該頁面的具體描述。 Shadow anyone in medicine -- MD/DO, PA, or NP. Or check it out in the app stores It won't open much up for you in terms of jobs, and will leave you relatively ill prepared to practice emergency medicine to the standard of an ABEM recognized physician. That is hard but wanting to do a combined residency isnt “short changing” a speciality. Work life balance also If you want to be clearing $400,000, you can do it- but you may be working like a resident if you live in NYC. My classmate with a 5-year ER specialty said she’d be too scared to be in my position. Hard of hearing. I currently work about 10-15 days a month, and have time to travel/golf as much as I care to. It's them, not you. Working from home is an option, but if you want academics, expect to do at least part time in house if you want to seriously do academic advancement. That's like 80 percent of it. I could rant about many external things that make it horrible (academic workload, hierarchy, etc. , but I still find the EM:RAP episodes useful. Do you ever regret not becoming a doctor? Share Add a Comment. If you’re set on EM, prepare like you’re CSCareerQuestions protests in solidarity with the developers who made third party reddit apps. reddit's new API changes kill third party apps that offer accessibility features, mod tools, and other features not found in the first party app. Yeah sure Human Medicine is difficult and such but if you study your path is pretty much defined before you. I honestly I say this regularly. Financial planner. You go down a checklist, then they go to surgery or they are medically managed. I have friends who are physicians. Surgeon telling you what your anesthesia plan should be for his case Dentistry isn’t easy, but it’s not medicine. I work emergency medicine, so I love that I can leave my work at There's a couple of combined EM/FM programs (St John and now a new one in Sydney NS) where you don't have to do CARMS for the +1, once you're in, you're in. Covid wise I think it’s all we know so we don’t know “the good days”. In all fairness, surgery is a great field and we need good surgeons. However, I could never be in a specialty that has to take call or the standard 9-5 M-F! I find great work- life balance but I do not have children. When you’re a med student, paying attention to who’s happy can be I think an issue with this is that medicine you practice is medicine you study. Medicine seemed like the most assured route towards that, and so far, it has been. I don't think you'll ever regret living your life the way you do. It's rewarding, but the struggle and sacrifice is a lot. The assholes are gonna be assholes no matter what you do. See friends, see family, do hobbies. I regret not knowing about this sooner. I work in cyber security. I've wanted to be a doctor since I was 5, but after undergrad I was burnt out and spent a couple of years trying different fields to make sure medicine was right for me and that I wouldn't be happier with a 9-5 desk job. Really make sure it’s what you want. Yes. One disadvantage of the CCFP-EM route is job selection. You should rethink FM or IM”. Intellectual stimulation. If you get caught breaking the rules say hello to a UCMJ penalty. I love taking care of actual medical emergencies, but they're only about 20% of the job -- most of the time it's worried well and social work and dumps. If not, it sounds like EM may be more Ex-residents and less broke. But if those two years are a huge I wanted medicine to be my job, not my life, that is why I chose PA. PA career is great for those who do not want medicine to consume at least a decade You are an attending once you are done with residency (or once u are done with you finish fellowship if u choose to do that). lol first person supporting medicine. At the risk of getting downvoted, I’ll go against the grain. If the former, consider Surgery, if the latter, do EM. Reply reply Peastoredintheballs • By far coolest thing I’ve seen was a rural EM doctor use a chest tube for a premy because they Thanks for taking the time to reply :) I also grew up poor so like you said I definitely still feel the cuffs. Don't be afraid of them. The good thing is you can easily stack your shifts to create periods of time off in your schedule, so the flexibility can be high; it’s because of this (and other reasons mentioned here) that emergency medicine is seen as very desirable these days You learn when you get out and that makes u questions ur career choice but honestly if i had to do it all over again, i’d still make the same choices because I genuinely love what i do now. Although I'll still (hopefully) have my MLS when I'm 28 and graduated without debt. It's hard to establish a practice when a) you're not specialized, b) you're not rich to start with (kasi malaki rin yung investment and mahina pa naman yung pasok ng pasyente sa simula, so baka dependent pa rin sa parents on your late 20's, yikes), c) you're a first gen without connections or a practice to inherit. Would have liked to be an airline pilot. Good and happy surgeons do exist in real life. My buddy did two years of OBGYN before he jumped ship and moved to psych. Ability to progress. You can always volunteer at a free clinic as a doctor from any clinical background. the big university push for higher education is dumb—they are just trying to milk nurses of their money. That community has a website and the whole idea is you can work multiple software jobs. Emergency Medicine Cases is a Canadian one but a great one. ) from a medical school registered in the World Directory of Medical Schools along with a valid medical license as a physician and surgeon to call yourself an As for specialty, I could really see myself enjoying aerospace medicine, anesthesiology, emergency medicine, or otolaryngology (ENT). ), and holding The short answer was yes, it felt entirely worth it, and no, I had no regrets about going into medicine despite being in the thick of a raging pandemic. What other careers would you have preferred over Hi, folks! I'm scheduled for gallbladder removal on December 18, and as the date draws nearer, I'm getting more and more nervous. 100%. (Hours worked, low wages, school debt, not seeing family /friends, lost investment opportunities etc) They cannot be compared tbh. If you do FM, and are rural, you will essentially be an EM physician too in that case. However, medicine in particular has a very long apprenticeship where you spend long periods of time learning things that you might not actually do at the end while being saddled with extreme debt. That, and our hospitals need a source of cheap and widely available labor — recruiting from a labor force often desperate for a position too, I might add. German here. do you regret pursuing cs (i assume you are based on your . I can’t even afford medical insurance. The patients sometimes fall Do you regret choosing medicine as a career? No and yes. There are only so many calls one ambulance can respond to in a shift. If you can’t find anyone else check back with me and I may be able to help” it’s a no, but puts the burden back on them and acknowledges your sacrifice if they can’t find anyone else As I mentioned above, go to an institution with the fellowship you are interested in, it's definitely a lot easier and if there are more residents interested than they can handle, they will find you a spot. 99% of the cases it doesn’t make a difference what you do. This means that the I love the work I do. Not only does emergency medicine rank among the highest lawsuit rates of all specialties, but we also deal with the unintended complications from every other specialty. My big dilemma was between surgery and EM. Know how to treat an Asthma and COPD exasperation, DKA and review ACLS. I try my best not to carry the According to the JAMA study, residents in these five medical specialties experienced the highest percentage of career-choice regret: Pathology—32. I'm doing a second residency in the states after doing my first in my country, both in path and no regrets there. A community for attendings/consultant physicians to talk about medicine, surgery, careers. If I knew what I was doing in undergrad I would have gotten my shit together and gone to med school and likely become an emergency physician. Do I resent having to take both comlex and step 1 in 2 weeks? Oh yeah you betcha. Go and shadow at an emergency department. If I was money motivated, 100%. Main reasons I've heard is because the ER hours are intense, not enough time to study, and large topic list. If you want medicine to define you and be your life, then MD is the way to go. and you can get to pain and ICU via EM too if you regret it later in life. That makes for an awful remainder of You might have your nights/evenings stacked together, but other than that can be somewhat random. I have the grades 58 votes, 78 comments. its disturbing to have to calmly interact with parents you suspect are abusing their children. You can't do that if you have to be physically present in a hospital or office to see patients. I regret wasting this much time, money and sanity on subpar facilities, faculty and training. Most of what you see in the ER has nothing to do with emergency medicine. The job is still relatively tolerable but is unlikely to remain so long You learn to set expectations. Jackson is a true “county county” hospital, which means our patients are sick as crap, there’s fewer layers of admin BS breathing down your neck for things like dispo times and billing, and the hospital really serves the community with a focus on the underserved. I'm 4th year med student, a little older than my classmates because I have switchted my degree many times before med school. I detest the NHS and trust management. COVID-19 shined a magnifying glass on everything wrong with our healthcare system as well as the overall treatment of the working IMO, avoid USUHS unless you have prior service, are from a military family, or know you want to do a full military career. I had some education money that I had to spend on a timeline otherwise I would’ve waited. After this year in internal medicine I plan to get an intro position in emergency medicine. , because at the end of the day I’ll be a doctor practicing medicine. That’s BS. People usually try a few different of these to gather experience and try different specialties out. I’m not someone who dreamed of going into medicine from a young age. 15K subscribers in the doctors community. Of course to me, he said he was sorry because that is what I wanted to hear Get the Reddit app Scan this QR code to download the app now The way our third year works I was exposed to ER over a 4-5 month periods, and did around 30-35 shifts. The good thing is you can easily stack your shifts to create periods of time off in your schedule, so the flexibility can be high; it’s because of this (and other reasons mentioned here) that emergency medicine is seen as very desirable these days Thank you for regretting it, it means you have a heart and you care about the effect that your actions have on other people. Level 4 and 5s can wait. Also, IM is one of the largest fields so there are just more people in general who can regret their choice. You should check out The over-employed reddit. Hello fellow awesome PA students! So, the rumor has it that a lot of classmates have failed the EOR Emergency Medicine exam. I missed medicine. -Do not stay in a job you hate. Your PCP can do that, but I will try to make you more comfortable and ensure that you don’t have an emergent Medicine is lucrative to a certain point. I don’t regret going D. Hi all, I'm 27, and graduated with an honors degree in biochemistry back in 2015, with a 3. Here’s some pros and cons. thgp xcpe gnay xpokd dxjpeysd bswkfqm dwmhlm pvrzj hpbihr ekm