Radiology vs surgery reddit Go to categories a click transitional and you should see them. 4 years residency The #1 social media platform for MCAT advice. However, radiology residency will be like nothing else you’ve ever experienced. I want to know if my strengths in radiology can offset my average performance in other rotations for the match. Decide your favourite now! a lot more physical work. I think pathology is the more interesting field for me. In the same way that neuroradiology is additional training in the neuro portion of radiology, IR constitutes additional training in the interventional portions of radiology. The sub is currently going dark based on a vote by users. Cardiology and vascular surgery didn’t have enough work and they were the ones who did the referring so guess who doesn’t get to do those procedures anymore? I’ll give you a hint, the cardiology and vascular surgery departments hired additional staff. People often don't mention the WLI for surgery as well and only mention WLI for radiology forgetting that WLI are pretty much in all specialities. Hey all. My doctor says there are 3 things that make them choose surgery over MTX-hcg over 6,000 (I think), size over 3. Your impressions of pediatric radiology are well behind the reality, and it’s the thinking like this that partly explains the shortage. Why be ashamed of the radiology A few things. They're all 1 year fellowships, although some ivory tower programs have 2 year neurorad fellowships for people planning on academics. %PDF-1. Great flexibility in building the type of practice I’d want similar to psych. Some people say that cardiac surgery is a dying subspecialty. Ultimately chose Radiology (not just based on this one conversation) and have no regrets. Outsourcing is another piece of misinformation that gets thrown around about radiology and usually goes something like "Oh well all the radiology jobs are just going to go to India". IR lost 2 physicians and didn’t rehire to fill those spots. This subreddit is a place where high income professionals of all types can ask, answer, discuss, and debate the personal finance and investing questions specific to our unique situations without being criticized, ostracized, or downvoted simply for having a high income and "first world" problems. Although I believe radiology is a more lucrative speciality. patient interaction and interventions depends upon personal intrest. Secondly, just so you are aware, radiology is not immune to mid-level creep as there are people called radiology assistants out there doing fluoro and reading radiographs. Finishing up the core rotations and much to my dismay the only thing I've remotely liked was surgery. Welcome to the Residency subreddit, a community of interns and residents who are just trying to make it through training! This is a subreddit specifically for interns and residents to get together and discuss issues concerning their training and medicine/surgery. It's probably well over 10 hours of lectures and 100-ish practice cases, each with video commentary. Also, the job market varies between Neuro and MSK, so I don’t think that’s a good one to time and base it off of. As radiation oncologists, we cure about 2/3 of the patients we see. OBGYN, easily. I'd be getting paid at least 50% more and have my choice of locations. I enjoyed thoracic surgery but realised I dont enjoy gen surgery at all, the toxicity, work, competitive behaviour, no support. pdf Diagnostic radiology vs. I like that it's diagnostic (vs anes) but without stroke call or the IM-ish inpatient-heavy residency (vs neuro). So I'm last year medical student and I'm still torn between to specialities which are General Surgery and radiology. Was wondering what peoples' thoughts are on the most marketable radiology fellowship for private practice. This would easily give a binary answer for the scan to go ahead To be fair, your experience is the exception. Completely torn between urology and radiology. I did taster week in ENT this year but could not arrange a taster in Radiology as the consultant never responded to me after 2 sets of emails (one was from her colleague). As a whole it’s moderately competitive. or if you want to do surgery but also still see patients you can consider ENT or ophthalmology. First off, IR does a ton of stuff: vascular work, biliary work, PCNUs, G-tubes, drainages, and biopsies. I'm a very technically-minded person too, so surgery really scratched the itch of getting to learn manual skills. However, even though people hate to hear this, I recommend against doing surgery unless you know that you want to be a surgeon. If you’re at all apprehensive about gen surg and considering radiology, I’d recommend radiology. We come in about 40% of the time, but every single night the pager will go off regarding something that I need to call back about urgently. My wife is in peds, wants to quit clinical branches and go into research after three years. Radiology you just kind of sit around unless you're doing a procedure. People probably say to start with X-ray because it's seen as the general starting point in the radiologic sciences and a radiology department. The MCAT (Medical College Admission Test) is offered by the AAMC and is a required exam for admission to medical schools in the USA and Canada. If I am interested in doing minimally invasive procedures, what field would be better? Surgery or IR? Also, if IR becoming it's own residency? or can I still go DR--> IR fellowship? I graduate in 2017, thank you in advance. (And we will still also do regular basic radiology stuff like perc nephs, percutaneous biopsies, abscess drains, LPs, etc. I am a burnt out gen surg PGY-2 contemplating switching to radiology. There is a surplus in major cities, yes. I’m doing preliminary medicine, but kind of regret not going for a TY year, as I have heard they are more chill, but I did get my number 1 preliminary medicine spot. rad onc you're basically stuck with a few options wherever you manage to find a job. And I’m not talking lobar pneumonia vs atypical. There's a shortage of consultants amf realativley decent scope for private work with WLIs and private surgery. If you like hospital medicine and procedures there’s other specialties like CCPULM, ICU, Trauma surgery, interventional neurology, etc. And frankly cardiologists make more money. Hi guys ! I'm planning to chose interventional radiology in residency program (not in the us ), however i'm concerned about how serious the radiation exposure is to the physician who is to close to the C arm of the fluoroscopy , And is this risk , a valid reason to abandon this dream and choose another path ? Thank you guys , In radiology, the information you had at the time you had it is in the permanent record - meaning so are your mistakes. Radiology job market is excellent though. IR will always be limited by not owning a patient population with other interventionalists e. My general understanding for choosing fellowship is to choose it based on what you want to do down the line bc that’s what your trained in. Seems like a great mix of clinic, procedures, some imaging. i saw elsewhere in the thread you said you’re a bit interested in vascular- just as a heads up, vascular ultrasound will involve you regularly seeing, touching, and scanning things like gangrenous limbs, weeping open sores, and limbs with amputated fingers/toes, especially if you work inpatient. you can chill with the surgical team all day + anesthesia lounge vs. You can always go more procedural after you’ve gotten your feet wet in residency, and a lot of jobs even for IRs can include a fair amount of DR. short term pay potential Vs long term pay potential. The physicians are very eager to engage with me in rad/onc and talked to me about how they match applicants in top programs. Sounds like you like the idea of radiology, but not the day to day. Body, mainly considering either Neuro or MSK. :( It sounds like you've done barely any research on the subject. I also think that the occasional procedures in radiology sound pretty cool. I would say that orthopedics is fairly heterogeneous as far as if you would be in the operating room, hospital, clinic etc. Varies by private vs academic, outpatient lab vs hospital lab, etc. Most of this is stemming from a recent incident where I broke my ankle and couldn't operate and realized I hate 95% of what this job entails. Path generally has better hours/lifestyle, less patient interaction. Great write up! If anyone wants any recommendations for videos to watch surgeries the night before, I recommend an app called Touch Surgery. So it's really more of a comparison of neurorad vs body rad vs Mammo rad vs msk rad, etc. From what I'm reading it seems that the main route into nuclear medicine is IMT 1 and 2 (or paeds, surgery, ACCS etc). Radiology is a comparatively new n still evolving stage as it is based more on newer technologies and has more varied branches within itself like usg, mri, ct, interventional radio and such. Did a quick google search “urology vs radiology Reddit” and this popped up lol. vascular surgery or NSGY able to take over certain things because they control the referral base. Google is your friend. Or you can go directly into vascular surgery and match into an integrated program right out of medical school. Skip Core Radiology, that book is for learning during your R1/2 years not for actual Core prep. Radiology residents: Mandell’s Core Radiology 2nd edition vs Brent & Helms 5th edition, which is better to start with? SERIOUS Based on my understanding these are the most up-to-date versions of these texts, and it sounds like Mandell’s Core radiology is easier to digest but Brant & Helms goes more in depth. However, I don’t think radiology is the right field for absolutely everyone, and has a lot of drawbacks to be aware of as well. We get minimal exposure to radiology in my medical school so far (MS2). Make sure you have backup letter writers. Specifically for radiology, I would try for academic over community. Anatomy and physiology were my favorite subjects in preclinical, particularly anatomy. It is very monotonous too. practice timings depends upon you. Absolutely. Also, if you lover surgery, I think you should go for a CT surgery career. I’m not saying it’s easy to match, but it’s not to ortho or ENT level. ===== 1. Still long hours, but better than surgery. Overall I would recommend, I think it's enjoyable diagnostically having the final say and the work life balance is great. If they feel a patient needs to go to surgery, they will somewhat alter what we reported. Even a hem/onc fellow in this current reddit thread demonstrates how strong the hem/onc job market is. lots of things to read. For the internal medicine and surgery prelims, select internal medicine or surgery in the category and look in the program description whether its a categorical or prelim. Fluoroscopy use is declining. A reddit community for dental students (students studying to become dentists BDS, DDS, DMD, etc) to share the latest news, articles, ideas, and anything else pertaining to the field of dentistry. I'm having a difficult time picking between dermatology and radiology and am no closer to making a decision than I was 9 months ago. Really only one of the NSx residents was more into the brain than surgery itself. On calls for radiology are no joke like what the other poster said, and still have to be on call for home as a consultant unless you do pure teleradiology. A lot of these Reddit posts will be biased toward radiology due to the field’s seemingly massive popularity and possibly Reddit’s higher fraction of introverted students (myself included). Did you feel more welcome in one vs. Ultimately, though, they have the final say. Urology uses a lot more medicine knowledge than other surgical specialties because of the stones we treat, and it's probably the most diverse surgical specialty second only to gen surg. Long answer: The transition from intern year to radiology residency can be incredibly challenging, because by the end of intern year, you will have at least achieved some mastery of the workflow. PM&R // Sharing #2 with radiology. ). Otherwise my outpatient lab weeks are nice Edit: nvm, commenter has mental health issues based on post history — I would disregard this ominous comment OP. Not really in a fun way either. Alternatively you can go into anesthesia and then work partly at a pain clinic or do critical care anesthesia. All of that doom and gloom about AI is bs. I don’t see a future during our careers where local therapies are not a pillar of cancer care. AI will only make radiologist read more cases and Intervention Radiology will take over many procedures from surgery and cardiology. Found the very broad and quite deep diagnostic aspect of Radiology across all organ systems and ages to be intellectually stimulating. This subreddit is for EVERYONE that includes people who are also trying to keep their gallbladder and do not want surgery. 4 %âãÏÓ 40 0 obj > endobj 73 0 obj >/Filter/FlateDecode/ID[896E829A1BA62F4AF2C21E1401562D4E>]/Index[40 62]/Info 39 0 R/Length 144/Prev 234242/Root 41 0 R If you enjoy managing vascular disease and also enjoy surgical techniques then chose VS. You move around a lot in path. It’s like saying one of you patients is dying and you’re going to spend hours trying to fix it. 3rd yr medical student torn between Radiology & NeuroSurgery. Not sure if you are asking the other guy or me, but my post op pt is 5-6 months total (initially it was supposed to be 12 weeks, but I had to have the posterior deltoid removed during the surgery and reattached) , currently I’m working on restoring full ROM and then I’ll be able to start work with elastic bands. i’m a vascular student at a hospital with a major limb salvaging clinic right now and i LOVE it IR used to do them. So when you are a junior radiology reg, your pay will be very limited. Like grab an organ, cut it up, take perfect pictures etc. general surgery is one of the biggest debates among medical students interested in physiology. The umbrella of radiology is split into 3 categories. student in terms of my scores--I think I can be more selective with path residencies (aim for mid-tier academic in-state) over radiology residencies (low-tier community out-of-state), possibly will be able to build local connections during residency and establish my career in my desired location sooner. I've been postponing this decision for so long, but now the clock is ticking. In terms of subspecialty you also have MFM (essentially internal med for pregnant patients plus C-sections), UroGyn or MIGS (straight surgery), or GYN-ONC (lots of surgery, chemo, healthy dose of inpatient medicine). Interventional Oncology: Radiology is a huge part of cancer care in general. I like them both and i find them interesting. The lifestyle is terrible. I don't think you can go wrong with either one. I was hoping you guys could help dispel rumors and confirm anecdotes. Pick up the line to find out which one. Tbh, I am not sure what the question(s) should be really. We'll stage them on diagnostic studies, but we also have a growing presence in both the work-up and treatment pathways. There's typically 2 types of positions available: combined programs (intern year + 4 year radiology residency) and radiology only (they don't provide the intern year, they start as PGY2/R1s). I have to do the final selection of my residency in 8 hours and have a choice between these 2 . My thinking for Radiology route is that 1) I love imaging 2) Residency seems a bit more manageable 3) I can always exit out from operating if I cant handle call to reading films 4) the techniques originated from radiology FM -> confusion, explored possibility of doing ENT -> applying IM I mean every 3rd year rotation (except OBGYN) you think "maybe I'll do this" for a few days and then realize you don't actually like it that much and it's just a coping mechanism. I am left to cover consults and our 16 beds. Which ones generate higher income? Best lifestyle? Highest RVUs? What about litigation risk? I've heard breast is best lifestyle, but can be mundane/not many like it overall. One minute I’m in the ER, then the NICU, then Tele, and then off to surgery! I like that I’m not stuck in one area of the hospital all day. Some specialties require separate prelim years. I thought I would hate surgery, but loved my trauma rotation. look at the curriculum requirements closely. Made my stomach fall right out of my butt every time. I'm a third year who struggles with the above. Please add anything that you feel has been invaluable for you in radiology residency / attending practice that may be beneficial for others. Perhaps we can be friends thru this 11 votes, 52 comments. Big academic places perform more advanced exams and see more complex pathology and post treatment changes. Prelim medicine/surgery vs TY do a prelim medicine or surgery if you are trying to match IM or neurosurgery/general surgery but werent successful the first time do a TY if you're going into ROAD specialty - TYs are generally more chill. Especially grossing where you have to cut up the organ in a certain way. Do I need to honor or high pass IM and surgery to successfully match into radiology? Peds is a toxic branch. Just felt it was unpleasant and it put me off big time. If you wanna do it, you HAVE to do an elective rotation to really be true to yourself. As such, pay difference in major cities is not significant enough for many people to justify having to take STEMI call, risk MSK injuries, radiation exposure etc. In regards to pro 1: Radiology can be very stressful in the reading room, particularly on call when you can be nonstop busy with the phone ringing off the hook. INR/ESN is a separate pathway from IR, and is generally 1-2 years on top of a neurorads fellowship. You guys also have far bigger student loans than I ever did. I like the idea of getting to do occasional autopsies and grossing specimens. Nearly all of my prelim medicine programs and TYs required a medicine chair letter (surgery prelims will require surgery chair letter obviously), and you can also use it for your radiology programs. Rads is stressful because of ever increasing volume but generally has better pay, more options to see patients and do procedures if you desire (or not). Basically, I'm stuck between cardiac surgery and cardiology/IM. I was deciding between them when picking a specialty, and I regret not picking radiology. nrmp. Some of the things I love about radiology: I get to go around the entire hospital, every department has patients that need x-rays. My only late days are when I’m on my hospital weeks handling several things at once. So to answer your question, yes textbooks and reading is really important for Radiology residents but if you never put it into practice then probably not. Trying to keep it broad so anything goes, but some potential discussion topics are listed below: Study methods Gaming mice shortcuts Specific dictation tips / macros Templates General Workflow General surgery is not “crazy competitive” except as you climb up the prestige ladder. Really liked seeing surgical pathology and anatomy which I 100% get in radiology Every surgery rotation I have been on, the senior surgery residents have told me how often they pick up things the radiologists miss, how they can read XYZ imaging modality better than most radiology residents, and how >50% of their job is basically radiology (straight from the mouth of a vascular surgery fellow). While in school I had an older Anesthesia staff tell me to do Radiology since you won’t want to wake up early and do Anesthesia when you’re old. This is wrong for many reasons but the main reason is that, in america, to be able to sign reads on any imaging modality you must be an american board certified During my surgery internship in a Dutch hospital the consensus seemed to be this: If the patients presents with acute calculous cholecystitis, is high risk, and on echo there are little signs of inflammation yet (oedema surrounding gallbladder, thick walls), laparoscopic cholecystectomy is performed immediately. I think this is enough to pass comfortably with an average score. I did a cardiac and thoracic surgery rotation a few months ago, and it was my favorite rotation so far in medical school. Welcome to the Residency subreddit, a community of interns and residents who are just trying to make it through training! The sky is not falling in anesthesia. Radiology residency Is tougher than you think. And the anaesthetist generally is the team leader In surgery- just quietly competently and without the need for dick swinging. Radiologists hv still not saturated due to the comparatively low number of seats. To the winner goes glory, reddit gold, and the ability to admit all their patients under medics whenever they choose! The losers go home empty handed (or reddit silver). Currently you will either go the traditional route (5+2) whereby you do a general surgery residency (5-7 years) and then a standard 2-year fellowship in vascular surgery. Sep 14, 2017 · Radiology in 2017 is absolutely in the same tier of competitiveness as general surgery. org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Charting-Outcomes-US-Allopathic-Seniors-2016. might have earning cap after certain growth. Often pay decent money for operating in your own local hospitals (probably more than radiology WLI)- however it is for more effort. To level up your reading skills? You probably won't get much more out of 4 weeks than you would with 2. Surgery makes hospitals money, people always want more surgery, and people keep getting sicker. I'm an average D. I think I find MSK more I'm personally a fan of not being conscious for stuff like this. Liked how radiology reads impacted patient care and had no idea how there was a fair bit of doing procedures with patients even in DR. /r/MCAT is a place for MCAT practice, questions, discussion, advice, social networking, news, study tips and more. Oct 4, 2010 · [Disclosure: I am a radiology resident going into interventional radiology] There was a thought provoking thread intiated by a surgery resident on the new Interventional radiology sub forum about recent trends in IR and how it may affect surgery. There is a relatively limited number of imaging findings that a pediatrician should reasonably call/act on without additional rads input and 2 weeks alone is probably enough to put you on better footing for those than all the peds people who never do any formal rads time. http://www. It was supposed to be conscious sedation which made me pretty nervous, but the anesthesiologist used propofol, and I don't remember a thing. My SIL was a radiology tech and my MIL was a dental hygienist. I've enjoyed both specialties so far and am on the fence and was hoping to get y'alls input. Welcome to the Residency subreddit, a community of interns and residents who are just trying to make it through training! Fwiw anaesthesia and radiology are both significantly more academic than surgery. Basically, radiology is definitely cool and I was definitely lured by a tons of cool tech, but after my intern year I realize I want 1) ownership of patients, 2) longitudinal continuity of care, 3) OR OR OR, and 4) really miss the work flow of surgery, 5) not to mention miss operating and being in the OR, and I think even procedurally heavy Radiology resident looking into fellowship options. As someone who switched, I can tell you, the stress is there no matter which branch, it's all a matter of perspective. Most of the time in their note they write verbatim what we reported, so I know they are using what we say. E. Update your perception with the latest Charting Outcomes report from the NRMP. Credit to whoever said that first… Honestly if anyone was to get dissuaded from doing radiology, I think this point would be it. Basically you need to grow up. We can further our education by cross training or going back to school to learn how to do cat scans/MRI or even interventional radiology. I've considered this same question many times. I'm saying it's not surgery - saying that is disingenuous. The rest all just loved surgery and it was, by a wide margin, why they did it. The best advice I got on deciding was from an ortho resident, who told me "if you can't decide between surgery and medicine, absolutely pick medicine. Also, would rather not deal with the headache of switching residencies (even rads --> IM) later on. Mar 6, 2021 · IR has a significant amount of DR and Vascular has a significant amount of Gen Surg. Leave work at work and potential for good amount of time off while making good money. This is a support sub for those with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (all types) and HSD—diagnosed or waiting to be diagnosed. While all of us do make mistakes, if it scares you to have people Monday morning quarterback, radiology may not be for you. It's also very different from family medicine. Pros - true surgery, variety of procedural techniques (open vs endoscopic vs microscope), long-term patient interactions, mostly healthy patients, mostly good outcomes, treat neonate to elderly, job market Cons - gen surg internship, more clinic vs procedure time, long-term patient interactions r/Radiology_memes: A dark squalid place for those memes which only Radiology geeks understand I just matched radiology last week. I get plenty of time off (12 weeks). O. Hocus pocus. I mean in the weeds Staph aureus vs strep pneumo shit. Until you retire. However, buyer beware as above. I try to follow up with my reads and the cases that go to surgery. As a lowly third year doing my core surgery, I’m on 2 weeks of cardiac surgery on a service with 1 resident and a staff, both of whom are in 2 procedures of 4-6 h each per day. “Radiology is on the phone for you” is never good. When I was a 4th year med student i was debating between IM and radiology. I'm not sure where you're getting your opinion that IR has less "credibility". Systemic therapies improve survival time but are also rarely curative without local therapy (surgery or RT). Grossing and post mortem are the only hands on parts while radiology has a wide spectrum. g. Radiology sounds very nice too. Like another poster has said in radiology you're gonna be stuck in SpR banding at around 47k base for 4+ years and will have lots of exams to complete. I know I could do a prelim year in Internal if I were to apply for radiology, but I had heard doing research from day 1 of intern year is super important for cards. 5 cm, or heartbeat detected. For practicing radiologists. true. For some that=fun vs lame for others that = scary vs safe. But radiology salaries and job market are hard to ignore. Pathology has the same problem. However, if interventional radiology is a large interest of yours, having that rotation could really help you in the job search. For example, if you want to do radiology or ophthalmology, you have to do a prelim year in surgery, IM, or transitional year. Without knowing anything about general surgery call burden, I think it is probably fairly similar. Like title says, currently a rising R3 in East Coast torn between Neuro vs MSK for private practice. Also in freida you may check the radiology “categorical” programs that include the prelim. Welcome to the Residency subreddit, a community of interns and residents who are just trying to make it through training! What they have in common is a potential for a good lifestyle. I was in pediatric surgery and I got out in a year, now in cardiac surgery. PGY-2: Radiology R1- The ACGME says 1st year residents can’t take call, making this possible the easiest year on your entire training hours wise. Surgery- washington manual of - current diagnosis and treatment in surgery Biochem- lippincott illustrated reviews of biochemistry Physiology- ganong (best imo) Radiology-essentials of radiology -Learning radiology Critical care-Critical Care at a glance Anatomy- prometheus + moore Genetics-thomson thomson Either way, I think radiology is the best job in the hospital. I eventually decided on Cardiology, for the following reasons: CAD used to be a surgical disease, then it became an interventional disease, and now I think it is becoming a medical disease (CABG has mortality benefit only for LIMA to LAD, PCI has mortality benefit only in STEMI, medical therapy non-inferior in pain control vs Welcome to Gallbladders! This subreddit is for people having gallbladder trouble, preparing for gallbladder removal, have had surgery, discuss diet or a place to discuss managing gallbladder disease symptoms. You have to absolutely love surgery, and arguably hate anything else to do neurosurgery. You'll have to see them on the ward for months. I’m a senior DR resident, and I love the specialty. e. This is a welcoming place for those affected (or those simply wanting to learn more) to ask questions, share successes and failures, feel less alone, and discuss everyday life. I had 2 ectopics and had MTX with one and surgery with the other. You can kill 2 birds with 1 stone by getting at least one letter from a department chair. People with a bachelors/masters in science are able to work in management as the managers/directors for departments. Is there a pathway for radiology trainees to achieve nuclear medicine CCT? Such as going back to complete IMT, then nuclear medicine on top? As lchasta2 has mentioned, Titan Radiology itself is more suited for review, but the same author also has a pretty good (and comprehensive) series of introductory lectures for chest/abdominal X-ray over at Radiology Ronin. The real surgery hack is to pick the site where everybody in the hospital is super nice and you're only in for 4-6 hours per day lol. If residents in these 2 fields can help me with pros and cons and coming to a decision because frankly i dont even know what to choose right now and very confused. . I had mine placed a couple of weeks ago by a radiologist. Depends if you want macro vs micro The only acute thing in pathology is probably frozen section. A consensus is, if you're in it for the brain, do neurology. I’m considering ESIR so I almost did preliminary surgery, but I don’t want to suffer that much for one year. Then training involves covering radiology and nuclear medicine and leads to dual CCT. hanging with other radiologists and techs Future of the field: Both are fine and fears are blown out of proportion. MSK vs. This subreddit is… I am on the exact same boat. In neurosurgery, if you screw up the patient may not necessarily die but be in a vegetative state for life. A few of my colleagues have eyed up IR as an alternative to surgery if ever they found the surgical lifestyle too much, and admittedly I’ve thought about it on occasion, because it seems like ‘vascular-lite’; previously I thought you would do your procedures and then on calls you’re tucked up in bed and then only get rung if summat I can offer some unique-ish insight. I have seen trainees switch to Radiology after CST but never seen Radiology trainee apply to surgery. Radiology has no ward or clinics, and we offer advice but no longer make any management decisions; while GI can't offer the same breadth of practice (Radiology goes across Medicine, Surgery, Paeds etc) and any Int Med job is arguably much less structured and predictable in terms of your working time (i. The surgical team or the emergency team would have (if not should have) performed a beta hcg test both quantitative and urine. Do the easiest thing you can, and if it’s in the same city as your advanced, sweet. Just 4 titans remain in the ultimate tournament to decide who reigns over medicine & surgery. Almost always, neck and back pain are exacerbated by psychological stressors. Radiology -earnings from early stage . Started radiology this year, it's been great. Interventional Radiology - heard it’s still procedural but less hours and less stress than surgery. Hurts way more post-o The sub is currently going dark based on a vote by users. You'll most likely be unbanded as you wont be doing on calls. I’m a general surgery resident at an academic program and I know what the apps look like of the people we interview and match. Both specialties allow you to explore the complex workings of the human body and use your skills to improve patient outcomes. This annoyed residents I Radiology years: PGY-1: Intern year- can do a preliminary medicine, surgery or transitional year. So many young IC will have to do a lot of general cardiology time. Yeah yeah, ice cream vs cactus, I know. I was a categorical medicine resident before I jumped ship to anesthesia. I'll tell you what a trauma surgeon told me when I was deciding between radiology and surgery: if you're torn between surgery and something else, pick that something else. I decided on radiology because how most of your day is focused on making the diagnosis. Although it’s pretty scarce in most of the states there is a Radiology Assistant pathway. I’d say most pathologists work around 40 hours a week. If you really like the heat of the kitchen and doing procedures interventional cardiology is for you. Surgery + endocrine + primary care + infectious disease + psych + radiology (if you do your own US). Radiologists are MDs. If you go into radiology you will have the power to scare the absolute shit out of nurses. Radiology is much better for lifestyle, income, location ability to work from home, work over seas work in your pajamas. Spent a few years in abdominal surgery, and one in radiology (as an MD): Oral + IV is mostly used for internal hernias, which +90 % of the cases is due to prior gastric bypass surgery creating some inner "loops" that may catch and strangulate the intestine. Only go into surgery if you can't see yourself do anything other than being in the OR. Call isn’t bad. The obvious question is would you rather be in the reading room vs the OR? One is fast paced, exciting, the other is stable and predictable. The concepts of radiation stay the same for CT and rad therapy so learning general X-ray tech education can help in furthering education for other modalities. There is a surprising number of vascular surgeons that do predominantly endovascular work (very similar cases to IR). If one of your patients gets sick To put it simply I went from surgery (couldn’t do lifestyle) -> anesthesia vs rads Ultimately went the rads route because I found anesthesiologist work alongside surgeons whereas radiologists work with surgeons. If you screw up in cardiac surgery, the patient just dies. As a graduating resident I get amazing job offers daily. Interventional procedures aided by radiology are certainly the future, whether the IR training path is the future or a future is debatable. This is a community for healthcare professionals to discuss surgery and related topics. Breaks everything down step by step on your phone. Liked that it felt like “real” medicine with lots of Dx. But I'm not saying it's terrible. Conversely, didn't really find peri-operative care that interesting. It sounds like hem/onc graduates can generally choose where they practice after fellowship vs. Both are usually smaller more close knit departments than say x-ray or CT and who you work with matters a lot more. Way easier to spot with the combination. I always thought that was the interesting part of being a doctor. For instance, in the thoracic section they’ll try to teach you that different bugs will cause a different, recognizable pattern of airspace disease. You may find others who disagree; hopefully they’ll chime in. It's much easier to see a radiologist's mistake than pretty much anyone else because of this. Someone told me doing radiology is like doing dozens and dozens of uworld questions every, single, day. I can only assume that its worse being a resident. CT surgery always fascinated me. I'm currently leaning towards joining a private practice after fellowship. I'm curious what other surgery-minded My passion for radiology is evident, I have a great story for my personal statement, and I've established a good social fit in my local rads department. My school doesn't have me do elec MS1 I have research opportunities for both choices, but there are more for rad/onc at my school. There is plenty of CT and MRI in pediatric radiology. No one knows the future, but baring a total shift in American healthcare, anesthesia will remain a solid job. I do love operating and was planning on going into breast or endocrine surgery doing many small cases a day in young, healthy patients. I come in, get the job done, then I’m out. Feel free to find help and ask questions. In radiology I'm mostly invested in interventional radiology fellowship but that is for later. As a radiographer, between X-rays and CT imaging, which modality exposes you (the radiographer) to the least radiation based on your annual dose/experience. The large majority of chronic neck/back pain does not need surgery and benefit from PT and antidepressants/therapy. I really love the procedural aspect of MSK and the MRs are really interesting if you know what you’re doing in my opinion. You will land a dope fellowship from anywhere but it's better to be exposed to complicated stuff early in your career and also be well rounded. Vascular surgery is changing. Crack the Core is great but unfortunately doesnt really have actual radiology images, questions are the best way to learn the actual appearance of things. Wᴇʟᴄᴏᴍᴇ ᴛᴏ ʀ/SGExᴀᴍs – the largest community on reddit discussing education and student life in Singapore! SGExams is also more than a subreddit - we're a registered nonprofit that organises initiatives supporting students' academics, career guidance, mental health and holistic development, such as webinars and mentorship programmes. Would purse GI for the procedures and variability if I matched IM. Diagnostic Radiology, which is further broken down into Xray, CT, MRI, Ultrasound, and IR. You would apply to both prelim spots and the advanced specialty of choice separately and interview for both. That said, going to xray school would make you a radiographer, not a radiologist. Opportunity cost is also another important factor - 12 years as a surgical trainee vs 5 years as a radiology trainee is a huge difference in net worth. Do you like working in the OR or in the dark room? i. The call is sometimes tough but still better thanCT surgeons. Although the debate for superiority of surgical bypass vs endo revascularization rages onit is undeniable that endo is frequently the better choice in select cases. 42K subscribers in the surgery community. Environment: Subjective. I wish I had been a radiologist. Would avoid. I initially made the jump thinking I would do critical care, but after the first 2 years of clinical anesthesia I have found that intra-op and peri-op care makes me happiest. I'm a radiology resident, I was interested in IR and I've help the IR pager at night for several months. I’m a 4th year who also pondered this decision for a long time. The most difficult aspect of neurointervention is deciding whether patients will benefit from a procedure or not which requires intimate familiarity with advanced neuroimaging. I'd apply for both. if you really love endo and minimally invasive work and are optimistic about its future chose IR, you will have the opportunity to treat patients in a number of sub-fields (oncology, liver, ports htn, PE, spine, pain, men, women’s healh, orthoIR, and more). Most rad residents are going on to do fellowship now. I come from a DO school with only one urology research project under my belt so that is why I am hesitant. Then you get involved w/ tumor boards where you have to have some general understanding of basic surgery approaches, heme/onc and rad onc treatments etc. Pediatricians are no more difficult to work with than adult doctors, and are usually nicer people. The sub will be back up tomorrow night. Radiology tech sounded more up my alley, personally, but dental hygienist has the benefit of being more or less impossible to automate or replace with AI I was between Anesthesia and Radiology my 3rd year in medical school. Hello everyone . One Consultant Surgeon jokingly said because we never take them. I'm a radiology resident trying to decide on a choice of fellowship and currently I'm between Neuro vs. They do amazing things and make a huge difference for patients and their cardiology colleagues. In terms of overall hours though, I'd say radiology is better. It's much closer to DR than it is to surgery. chill when compared to med and surgery. the other? Also I've heard IR (from a Radiologist perspective) is very competitive right now and is attracting some of the top new doctors. I've looked into interventional radiology and found it very interesting, and will do a taster week. eeiqmk vqmdmz weiv xuuglnz waxmrim bbayab nepba sptefs rtomq hwa