centered image

Read This Before You Drop Out Of Medical Residency

Discussion in 'Doctors Cafe' started by Hadeel Abdelkariem, Dec 25, 2018.

  1. Hadeel Abdelkariem

    Hadeel Abdelkariem Golden Member

    Joined:
    Apr 1, 2018
    Messages:
    3,448
    Likes Received:
    21
    Trophy Points:
    7,220
    Gender:
    Female
    Practicing medicine in:
    Egypt

    A physician needs to complete at least one year of training in a certified residency program and must pass all three parts of the USMLE to become qualified to apply for a medical license. Residency entails a 3-7 year minimum commitment of training to attain clinical skills and board eligibility. Residency is highly sought after, and there are hundreds of candidates who do not match each year.
    I want to drop out
    But what if, after finishing medical school, matching, and starting your training, you decide that you hate residency and want to leave before finishing? What if you decide that you want to pursue another avenue? You will most likely receive a number of different messages from various people.
    I have received this question over a hundred times, and I have heard over one hundred different stories of why residents want to drop out, including:
    • Bullying
    • Burnout
    • Anxiety
    • Disenchantment
    • A sense of missing out on your true calling
    • Concern about the future of medicine
    • Landed another good opportunity

    The answer of whether or not you should leave residency depends on how you visualize your future.

    Ask yourself the following questions.
    • Do you want to see yourself practicing medicine the same way that senior level physicians in your specialty practice medicine?
    • Do you want to see yourself as a leader in your specialty?
    • Do you want to see yourself spending hours working in your specialty, but not as a leader?
    If you answered yes to any of the above questions, then you need to stay in your residency to become qualified.
    Your discouragement is understandable, but dropping out will not help you get where you want to go.
    • If bullying, intimidation or harassment are driving you out of your program, seek the assistance of a mentor (preferably a senior faculty in your specialty) who can advocate for you. There is a strong chance that the person or people who are behaving unprofessionally with you are also behaving unprofessionally with others, and your complaint is likely to be one of several complaints.

    If you answered no to all of the above questions, then move on to the following questions.
    • Do you want to see yourself practicing medicine the same way attendings in another specialty practice medicine?
    • Have you discovered that another specialty that you were not previously exposed to is appealing now that you have had some exposure?

    If you answered yes to that question, then you need to develop good relationships with your program directors and transfer into a different residency.
    You deserve to practice the specialty you want to- and even if you waste a few years of training to get the specialty you want- you will find the extra training well worth it.

    [​IMG]


    If you answered no to all of the questions so far, then move on to the next question.
    • Would you like to be a leader in the health care field?
    • Do you want to work in a non-clinical job in medicine?
    If you would like to be a leader in health care, the honest truth is that you will have a very hard time if you do not complete residency. It is true that leaders in health care can be nurses, PhDs, pharm Ds and MBAs. But the vast majority of non-MD professionals did not leave their own training and are certified and usually experienced in their own fields.
    I am sure you don't want to hear this, but, completing your residency actually puts you on par with non-MDs who are qualified in their own areas.
    If you have still answered no to every question so far, then move on to the next question.
    • Would you prefer to work as a businessperson, a lawyer, an investor, a journalist, a professional consultant, an entrepreneur or in any other field with little to no emphasis on medicine?

    If you answered yes, then leaving residency is probably in your best interest. Residency, board eligibility and board certification will not help you attain these types of positions any more than just having a graduate degree. In fact, this is the only instance in which you will waste time professionally by remaining in your residency. But, be aware that your medical school and your residency will not be helpful in getting you the job you are looking for, and that you will have to start at the bottom and work your way up.

    Source
     

    Add Reply

Share This Page

<