choosing a specialty

Posted on September 9, 2009 by ayesha-1511.
Categories: Uncategorized.

rasanya blog ni tak mcm blog student medic langsung kan..

terjumpa artikel ni..copy paste kat sini eh..

sebagai persediaan untuk masuk tahun 4..

selamat kembali ke sekolah semua ^_^ Y

***

It’s time for fourth year students to get serious about choosing their specialty area. Some of you are lucky, and everything lines up: you know which clinical area interests you most, your board scores and grades/letters are all in the correct range, and you have helpful professors on your side. For you, it’s just a matter of doing the paperwork on time. You can stop reading here.

But I know there are many others of you out there who aren’t sure what specialty to choose. Or, you’re torn between 2 or 3 specialties. Or you know what you don’t want but aren’t sure what you do want. Or you know what you want, but aren’t sure if your qualifications are strong enough. Read on!

If you’re stuck, here’s a decision tree to follow:

1.Find or make a list of all the specialties available directly after medical school (ie, skip fellowships). 

2.Cross off the ones you definitely don’t want. You don’t need a string of reasons beyond the fact that you simply can’t see yourself doing it long term.

3.Perform a GoogleTM search with the phrase “choosing a medical specialty.” When I tried it, I got about 89,800,000 entries. Set a timer for no more than 1 hour and browse through the first several pages. Take some of the “what specialty are you?” quizzes. If nothing else, they will give you some ideas and possibly make you think about specialties you haven’t explored. You can safely avoid making an exact ranking of specialties at this point. Just see which specialties you seem to be most suited to and which you should rule out.

4. Now, list several specialties you can see yourself doing long term, no more than 6.

5. Research those specialties in your institution. Go to the departments and make friends with the residency program coordinators. If you haven’t already done so and haven’t rotated in the program, arrange to shadow a faculty member for a day. Talk with 1 or 2 residents and check out the pros and cons of the specialty. Finally, ask the program coordinator if your board scores would be in a competitive range. Most program coordinators won’t share their board score cut-off, but they likely would tell you if your scores are within range.

6. Narrow your list to 2 or 3 specialties. Now, and only now, talk with family and friends. Tell them you’re thinking of these specialties, and get their opinions. Listen hard, and get them to articulate the basis for their opinions.

7. Delete any reasons related to job shortages or oversupply of physicians in a specialty. You don’t need 200 jobs, you only need 1, and you should be prepared to relocate somewhere less attractive if you choose a specialty that’s overcrowded or not in much demand. Plus, demand can change by the time you finish training.

8. Delete any reasons related to lifestyle or money, unless those concerns come from your significant other.

9. Delete heritage reasons (”Your father is a surgeon; you should be one, too”).

10. Now, write down your own pros and cons, independent of all the advice and aptitude testing and board scores. Be honest here. If your priorities are lifestyle, having children during residency, income, opportunities for foreign travel, or avoiding rough circumstances, then rank them appropriately. What fascinates you, what could you be passionate about? Don’t be at all logical here.

11. But do be logical in this next step. And brutally honest with yourself: Did you barely pass the boards? Internal medicine might not be for you, even if you really enjoy outpatient medicine. Do you tend to avoid or dislike patient contact? Don’t consider family medicine or pediatrics. Do you have high board scores, want a benign lifestyle, but aren’t very visual? Don’t pick radiology.

12. If you follow all these steps, combining thoughtful reflection on what makes you happy with an objective look at your strengths and weaknesses, one option should start singing out louder than the others. And that’s your specialty.

Note that you should take other people’s views of your strengths and weaknesses into account, but not necessarily follow their advice. Spouses are a special case because you are making a joint life together. Still, the final decision should be yours, informed by some actual data that help you determine “the best fit” between you and your specialty-to-be.

You can do this in a week; don’t procrastinate and don’t make the problem bigger than it is. If you choose a specialty that turns out to be a bad fit, you can still change after the first year.

Be practical, but don’t limit yourself. I know a physician who started medical school at age 38, one who had to take the boards several times, one who barely passed one of her steps by 1 point, and another who doesn’t like patient care. The first one is now practicing radiology in a large private clinic, the second is a fellow in a high-risk obstetric anesthesia program at a very prestigious academic medical center after switching from surgery because of physical limitations, the third is a fellow in a neonatal intensive care unit after completing a successful pediatrics residency, and the last is working for a large drug company doing information technology, his real love.

Even if you are “nonstandard,” you can find a specialty you will love and which will value you. Good luck!

Anne Vinsel, MS, MFA
Project Administrator, Graduate Medical Education, University of Utah Medical Center, Salt Lake City, Utah

**

tak sure la these 12 steps applicable or not untuk kita..tak faham jugak ’score board’ ..ape tuh? hehe..xpe lah ek..nanti bile kita dah kat dalam bidang tu mungkin baru lebih nampak minat kita lebih kat mana..is it?

in my mind rite now..OnG..em..adui..mampu ke??entah la..xtau..susah kan nak pilih..MACAM2 kita kena consider..semoga berjaya semua..

oh nak tambah step ke13..dah wat pilihan tu..ahsan kita solat istikharah..minta allah beri kita petunjuk..dan minta yang terbaik untuk dunia dan akhirat kita..semoga berjaya!

5 comments.



Comment on September 9th, 2009.

salam k.aye….heheh..haah,klu sy lah,tak perlu pon 12step tu kceuali step ke13 tu.
masing2 ada minat dan suara hati.insyaAllah bole tau la mn2 yg bekenan dlm byk2 bidang tu.
bole jgk berubah..mcm sy dlu nk amek cardio thorax surgeon,bl da maken faham ni…mcm nk amek OnG jgk.nk 2-2 rsnya.
heheh…wlw apa pon,biarlh usaha kt sekuat dan sehebat angan2 ye tak k.aye?

  ayesha
Comment on September 9th, 2009.

salam nini..memang certain orang ada minat dan suara hati masing2..macam akk ni nini..ada je minat n suara hati..cuma kadang2 dalam hidup kita..x semua yang kita minat kita kena buat..ada perkara yang perlu kita fikirkan supaya apa yang lebih utama tak kita ketepikan hanya dek kerana minat kita..

kalau akk nk bg contoh..akak minat nak jadi OnG..konon2 nak jadi cam Dr.Zain, Dr.Harlina..tapi awak pun tau kan kerja OnG tak kenal waktu..nanti kalau dah berkeluarga..kena minta izin dn tny pendapat pasangan..kalau ada anak..kena fikir anak..camne plak dgn prog tarbawi..sume tu kena masukkan dlm consideration..

medical school ni pun kita dah terasa penat..belum lagi kerja nini..kerja 100x ganda penat nye..penat mental fizikal dan emosi jgk..dgn mas’uliyyat yang banyak..makin la susah utk kita maintain iman dan amal fardi..tah2 yg wajib aje buat..yang sunat makin dilupakan..

takut snanye bila fikir masa depan..
wallahul musta’an..amin

Comment on September 10th, 2009.

Assalamualaikum wbt.
harapnya k.ayesha sihat2 selalu kat sana. jg mkn. jgn kembung perut lg :P
hmm.. mungkin dalam fatrah clinical year sy akan rasa dahulu rencah2 yg ada dalam setiap department dan cuba nilai kekuatan dan kesesuaian dri. bila fikir2 nak jd student je, tak nak kerja.haha.

sy setuju dgn pendapat k.ayesha, bukan senang nak pilih. kena fikir tarbiyah, family dll. ‘ala kulli hal, kita usahalah apa yg tbaik, yakin dgn pertolongan Allah, sambil kita kuatkan pegangan kita dgn tali Allah. insyaAllah kheir sume.

Selamat mengejar malam lailatul qadr!

Comment on September 10th, 2009.

to mai:
akak doakan mai sihat2 jgk..

tulah..asek kembung je..seb baik ade bam serai nik..hehe..

tulah..kalau nak fikirkan kesusahan keje jadi doktor..akk pun xnk keje..tp..belajar 6 tahun..campur houseman 2 tahun..rasa cam rugi lak klu x keje kan..em..xtau la

akk klu boleh x nak wat pilihan..
akk x suke wat pilihan..
n akk takut nak wat pilihan..

tapi dalam hidup ni..kita kena bijak dan berani memilih jalan hidup yang akan kita lalui..allah yang bentangkan di depan kita pilihan2 tu..dan Dia tak paksa kita utk pilih mana2 satu..sume tu atas kita..kita yang pilih..

bagi orang2 yang diberi petunjuk, Dia akan tunjukkan jalan mana yang baik dan jalan mana yang tidak..dan awal2 lg Dia dah tahu kita akan pilih jalan yang mana..kerana Dia Maha Tahu..yang dulu, yang sedang, dan yang akan brlaku..

di setiap jalan ada baik dan buruknya yang sendiri..ada susah dan senangnya..dengan izin, bantuan dan pertolongan Allah lah jua kita lalui jalan itu..

cuma kita harus yakin..

jika seluruh manusia dalam dunia ini berkumpul untuk memudaratkan kita..mereka tak akan mampu untuk memudaratkan kita melainkan dengan izin allah..

dan juga kita harus yakin..

allah x pernah menzalimi hambaNya..bahkan kita lah yang menzalimi diri sendiri..dan semua keburukan yang menimpa kita..disebabkan dari perbuatan tangan kita sendiri..

allahummahdina fi man hadait

  nik_10
Comment on September 27th, 2009.

9. Delete heritage reasons (”Your father is a surgeon; you should be one, too”).

haha..kalau nik,nik amik step ni je bleh ke?
woh..bam seraiku,ape khabarkah nasibnye disana?mau lagikah satu stok baru?

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