The Gateway to Your Orthopaedic Career.

Orthopedic Gateway for Orthopedic Professionals

Orthopaedic surgery news, reviews, forums, videos, educational resources
  Thursday, 01 October 2009
  15 Replies
  6 Visits
0
Votes
Undo
Hey guys. Whenever I talk to an attending at my institution about my interest in orthopedics (mainly for the overseas mission work application) they always bring the subject back to which sports I play or whether I sit in front of the TV during my free time and watch the game. I definitely like playing basketball and raquetball but I really don't watch sports simply because I have other hobbies too. Although from talking to my attendings, this doesn't seem acceptable. Am I the only one interested in ortho that is like this?
16 years ago
·
#55157
0
Votes
Undo
Yep, and you probably won't match because of it. Time for you to start thinking about another specialty.
16 years ago
·
#55158
0
Votes
Undo
I'll ignore your jackassery for now.

I was not asking if you had to watch sports to match into ortho. My question was directed at the culture of orthopedics and how integral the discussion of and the knowledge of TV sports was to the culture of orthopedics.
16 years ago
·
#55159
0
Votes
Undo
It seems, from my observation, that there are 3 types of ortho surgeons:

1. The "jocks" - played sports all their lives and now are ortho surgeons
2. The "brains" - didn't play many sports, but scored 250+ on the boards and have 10 NEJM publications
3. Combination of the above.
Rendering Error in layout BBCode/Image: Layout 'BBCode/Image:default' Not Found. Please enable debug mode for more information.
16 years ago
·
#55160
0
Votes
Undo

Ask a stupid question, get a stupid answer, eh...
16 years ago
·
#55161
0
Votes
Undo
That isn't just ortho, that is the way American men relate to eachother. Jon and Kate don't come up often in conversations in ortho.
16 years ago
·
#55162
0
Votes
Undo
hah! Maybe not at your program...
16 years ago
·
#55163
0
Votes
Undo
Ha, well I know what program is going in my #1 spot. sssssssssuper!
16 years ago
·
#55164
0
Votes
Undo
Haha, Jon and Kate came up at the ortho interview I had at Wayne State yesterday. Granted it wasn't part of one of the official interviews...but a resident was there!

Also, I don't follow sports, don't really play any either.
16 years ago
·
#55165
0
Votes
Undo
Sure, I like to watch a good college football game when its on, but I don't follow sports. I can think of much better things to do than waste my life reading ESPN.com and watching every game on TV. I played soccer in high school and college, and no, I'm not giant nerd. There are many ortho residents out there like me. We are not all "jocks" who can only talk sports.
16 years ago
·
#55166
0
Votes
Undo
This thread made me smile. While I played sports in high school and college, I'm certainly not a jock. I have never enjoyed watching sports. Since as one person said in this thread, men do seem to bond over sports, I have been wondering if I should "study" at least enough to carry on a conversation. Is it worth it guys? Or as a woman, am I allowed to make small talk about something else and still be your friend?

To the original poster - wow, I want to do international mission work too. Glad I'm not the only one!
16 years ago
·
#55167
0
Votes
Undo
If you brew your own beer you can talk about brewing beer. That is about it though. Ortho= beer, sports, chest bump, under armour!
16 years ago
·
#55168
0
Votes
Undo
I am an orthopod - 5 yrs into practice. Every one talked about sports and its importance to ortho.


My answer at my residency interview many years ago was that my orthopaedics was meant to allow old folks to walk and restore limbs to trauma victims. (Now I am a trauma and joint focussed surgeon).

Some people will argue that previous sports experience improves hand - eye coordination. Yes it is probably true. However, most orthopods were not sports stars in college high school. That is why you have 5 years of training. Some will be good in the begining but others will catch up.

So live life at your terms. Do not change your self to make friends (studying sports to carry on a conversation). There is plenty in real life to keep non-sports people going.

In residency or in practice - your colleagues will care far more about if you can be trusted to be honest and fair. I do not think people base their relationship based on knowledge of sports.
16 years ago
·
#55169
0
Votes
Undo
Thank you, that was very encouraging.
16 years ago
·
#55170
0
Votes
Undo
Oh, we're being serious?

If you talk to your ortho residents and attendings about regular stuff, you'll see that they are a pretty diverse group of folks. Not ethnically diverse as a community, but diverse in terms of who they are, what they've done, and what they like to do when they're not working.
  • Page :
  • 1
There are no replies made for this post yet.