The Gateway to Your Orthopaedic Career.
  Sunday, 15 August 2010
  3 Replies
  4 Visits
0
Votes
Undo
Hello,

I am a first year medical student interested in Orthopedics. I am just beginning to learn about certain fields and what may interest me. Lately, I've had a lot of interaction with orthopedic surgeons because of an injury that require surgery, so I've been able to find out about the field directly from them.

I'd like to know about what the lifestyle in Orthopedic Residency is like and also hear about the Spine fellowship, if anybody can give me information about it. Ortho Spine really appeals to me because of its interaction with things that a NS can also do; The lifestyle of NS is not for me, so I think that would be a way to be involved in something that also appeals to me. Can someone please tell me more about the orthopedic residency and spine specialty? I am located in Houston so there is plenty of places where i can become involved.

I did research all through college in a lab and planned on ending my research involvement when I started medical school in my basic science lab (development). Thus far, its looking really promising; it seems like I've discovered a gene important for cardiac function and development of blood vessels. Im somewhat interested in cardiology but certainly not as much as the surgical specialties (especially Ortho, and maybe ENT or Urology). At this point i don't know what to do, my research could be a pretty high impact paper but not in a field that completely interests me right now. I am the only one working in the project so If i do not finish it may not get published right away. I'm worried about continuing the project and getting a publication in different field, knowing that my interests lie elsewhere. Should I just drop the basic science project all together and get involved in something more orthopedics related?
15 years ago
·
#56688
0
Votes
Undo
completely agree as above. do what interests you, as it may change along the way. any research looks really good no matter what specialty it is in, especially if it's as high impact as you are suggesting. so i would finish the project because it will look really good if it's something you followed all the way through...impressive on a CV.

in terms of oath spine vs NS...just do what you want. lifestyles are probably going to be similar. once you get out in practice you can be as busy or not as you want to be. residency is going to be hard regardless. i vote ortho spine...but i am biased!
15 years ago
·
#56687
0
Votes
Undo
Just learn as much about medicine as possible and do whatever extra stuff that you are interested in; not just to get to the next step. You will figure out what you are interested in eventually. I wouldn't think about lifestyle, compensation, etc at your stage, just pursue specialities that seem interesting.
  • Page :
  • 1
There are no replies made for this post yet.

Search your questions

Leaderboard

1
Dora
User's Points: 18
2
Brenda
User's Points: 11
3
Nino
User's Points: 10
4
manhnv102
User's Points: 9
5
venky96188
User's Points: 8

Top Members

butterfingerbbs
2 Posts
83 Replies
6 years ago
bladerunner101
10 Posts
68 Replies
1 year ago
Teggie
6 Posts
59 Replies
6 years ago
blaqmamba
2 Posts
35 Replies
9 years ago
bonetrauma2
1 Posts
34 Replies
7 years ago