So how similar are ortho vs general surgery residency as far as hours, personalities, etc...? I have always wanted to do ortho, but I just finished my gen surg rotation, and I did not like it at all. I mean the OR was cool, but we were always dealing with ventilators, and chronically ill patients, and hardly ever in the OR.
Any opinions would be much appreciated.
I'm guessing you're asking this because you thought you wanted to do ortho but hated gen surg. Here's my take:
In general (note that this is in general) people in Gen Surg are miserable. Attendings are mean, residents work hard and typically don't like it - especially in a malignant program like the school I go to. They also do a lot of managing sick patients that don't need to go to the OR. It also seems like they have an arrogance about them that they are the best doctors in the hospital. Example: my buddy who also wants to do ortho is doing a Shock/Trauma gen surg rotation and when he told them he wanted to do ortho they said, and i'm paraphrasing, "why would you want to do that,don't you want to help people?"
that being said, it is different in the world of ortho as compared to gen surg.
Hours: depends on what service in ortho and what kind of inpatients you have. If you're on the hand team, not a lot of inpatients, you show up later and the cases usually finish earlier (compar.) so the hours are better. If youre on joints or trauma with more inpatients then your hours will be longer
Intern year for gen surg and ortho are fairly similar at most places, and they are miserable in both fields usually...
You Operate a lot...and there are very surgery heavy ortho programs out there. That being said, there is a lot to learn from clinic and stuff. You don't usually spend most of your days in ortho dealing with floor issues and managing very ill inpatients.
In the private world, a lot of orthopods consult internal medicine/ICU to help manage vents and all those other ICU/medicine complexities
That's my take. Ortho is awesome and you will 1. be the only person in the hospital who can do what you do, and 2, actually definitely make people better (except spine...)
And to echo fatpad, matching is a different story
--Ortho is pretty tough to match in so i'd plan for ortho (research, etc) and if you fall back to something else it's easier than climbing an uphill battle