Stolen from here |
Hopefully
not.
In any case,
back to family medicine. I completed this six-week rotation at a local family
medicine residency program. This means that I spent a lot of time seeing
patients and presenting to residents. After that, the resident would come say
hi to the patient and then we would go present the patient to the attending
physician. Over the course of the rotation, I also was able to spend some time
in a dermatology clinic, spend some time on the family medicine inpatient
service (I honestly didn’t know this was a thing before this rotation), shadow
a home health nurse for a day (which was an interesting side of medicine I
really hadn’t had much exposure to), and visit a nursing home.
Of course,
one of the best parts of the rotation was the hours. Since family medicine is
by-and-large an office-based specialty, the hours were pretty much office hours
– 8 am to 5 pm most days. Which was beautiful. The days generally went by
fairly quickly, too, as there were lots of patients to be seen.
The Verdict
As medical
students progress through third year and spend some time in various
specialties, we get a chance to try and pick out the things we enjoy (or don’t
enjoy) about each specialty and – hopefully – have at least an idea of what
we’d like to do when we grow up by the end of third year (if not sooner). I was
actually really surprised by how much I enjoyed family medicine. I knew that
I’d likely enjoy it – I’ve enjoyed most of my rotations so far – if only
because I was looking forward to getting back to the broader field of medicine
after my psychiatry rotation. Psych was fun, and I actually found myself
considering the field, but I really missed using my stethoscope.
Something
that the family medicine rotation helped me realize is that I enjoy the broader
medical fields. Pediatrics was pretty broad, although I don’t know that I want
to deal exclusively with kids. I certainly see the appeal of being very
familiar with a well-defined and limited (but certainly not small) body of
knowledge (as in psychiatry or OB/GYN), but something like family medicine was
a bit closer to what I envision when I picture myself as a doctor – someone who
is moderately comfortable with the majority of medicine. No one person can be
an expert in everything, which is why specialists are necessary, but I just
don’t see myself being a “knee guy” or a “liver guy” when it’s all said and
done.
Does that
mean I’ll do family medicine? Who knows. Emergency medicine is still high up on
my list, but this rotation reinforced why – I like the idea of being able to
handle most things. One doctor I was talking with about career choices said
something to the effect of, “Family medicine and emergency medicine are sort of
on the same spectrum – it’s really just a matter of how bloody you like your
patients.” In particular, emergency medicine’s unofficial motto – “anyone,
anything, anytime” – appeals to me.
Of course,
that’s a fairly romanticized way of going about choosing what field you are
going to work in for most of the rest of your life. There are obviously many
other considerations in choosing a field. Time invested in training, hours
worked, what hours you work, what you
actually do on a day-to-day basis, etc. are all things to think about. Also,
I’ve still got two of the biggest rotations of third year ahead of me, so I
can’t put my foot down now and say exactly what I’ll end up doing. Who knows –
maybe I’ll end up loving surgery (probably not). We shall see. In any case, it should
be a rather… interesting… next eight weeks. Surgery, here I come.