• Hey Guest. Check out your NeoGAF Wrapped 2025 results here!

Physician-Age: Calling all students and doctors

Yeah I get what it is, but why should I avoid it? Not that I intend to purchase one.

Do a lot of first-years show up with a kit like that and end up never using it or something? Bring me up to speed with your med school inside jokes, damnit!

Great news dude (the fact that you're Dutch makes it even better:P

Op Ons Oude TuinTerras At Frank Verse Groente Van Albert Heijn

^^ inside joke-ish number 1

Nogmaals gefeliciteerd!
 
Neurosurgery R1.

PfiwvKi.gif

We'll see you in seven years.
 
Is anyone in/headed to PA school or currently a PA? What is your day to day like? How did your pre-reqs go? My wife was recently given a serious promotion that would allow me to go back to school without any financial or job stress and I feel like I should use this opportunity to the best of my abilities. I have some HCE, I've done various tech assistant jobs in the Hospital and I was also a 911 operator for some time. I honestly never thought I would be able to pursue something like this and I just want to make sure this is the right decision for me. I would love to hear your stories.
 
Why, if I may ask?

Hahaha, just joking. I love the work, I love the subject matter, I love the procedures.

Neurosurgery is the very definition of having to be all-in, or else you wash out from the work load and fatigue. It's just quite a daunting mindset going in, knowing you have to dedicate a ton of time (and stay post-call almost every shift!).
 
a question for you guys

did anyone of you ever give an advice in a doctor thread? I always try to stay away as far as possible from those threads :D
 
Yeah, it's usually "go to the doctor."

Usually, yeah. I think I made some comments in the Hillary Clinton blood-clot thread about what it was and I'll do that stuff every once in a while. If it's actually about a poster then my comments are pretty limited to "go see a doctor" and to tell all the people that ARE making comments to stop because they really don't know anything and all they're doing is making the OP worried, especially if it's not about the OP and about a family member/spouse.
 
Just took Step 2 CK today. Reminded how much I hate those questions where they force you to lock in your answer with the next one confirming the right answer. Wound up getting one of those three-part questions and got both the first 2 wrong. Ugh.

Overall though, the test was more or less what I expected. Mostly IM of course, though I was a bit surprised how much Peds there was as well (always the toughest section for me). Didn't see a whole lot of Surgery/Trauma stuff, probably got more from OB and Psych. For me, the first 3-4 blocks felt more straightforward, with the last few blocks ramping up in difficulty. Surprisingly the 9 hours were a lot less grueling than I had feared, even as the q's got harder towards the end.

Anyways, glad to be done, though I think I'll kind of miss sleeping in and studying on my own schedule. Kinda reminded me about what I liked about the first 2 years of med school. Back to being sleep deprived on rotations!
 
a question for you guys

did anyone of you ever give an advice in a doctor thread? I always try to stay away as far as possible from those threads :D

I usually try and avoid it. Although, it's good to remind people why. So many people in my family try the same thing. You will quickly understand why it's bad giving medical advice outside of your office. Heaven forbid, you give advice and someone dies. You will be a target. If a patient leaves the hospital, then calls back to ask a question to a resident, you could be in deep shit. Best to leave some people be, including all people on this forum.
 
I'm an Anaesthetist and Intensive Care Specialist Registrar and research fellow in the Uk. Most of the time it's good fun.

Just discovered this thread- it's very US focused!
 
I'm about to start my second year of med school (D.O.).

Any boards resources that you guys would recommend (whether its for COMLEX or USMLE) or any advice in general for boards?
 
I'm about to start my second year of med school (D.O.).

Any boards resources that you guys would recommend (whether its for COMLEX or USMLE) or any advice in general for boards?

Whoa you're at DO school? I thought you went to the Caribbean

I'm currently applying, mind if I ask you some questions via PM?
 
Orgo this fall. MCAT next spring. Gonna be applying next summer.
Wish me luck, hoping I get into one of my top choices!
 
Any MCAT prep sources that you guys would recommend?

I'm using the Kaplan books and of course my text books, but I'm not exactly thrilled with the amount of content. I'm searching for better material to study with. I've heard the Kaplan course isn't the best either. Their practice tests are pretty good. There are typically free practice exams at the university you attend.
 
Clerk here in my final year of school. Between the long hours, exams and residency applications, I feel pretty maxed out.


I'm assuming residency is not easier. :P.
 
a question for you guys

did anyone of you ever give an advice in a doctor thread? I always try to stay away as far as possible from those threads :D

See a doctor. Last thing I want is to be wrong and do something that might hurt someone. I might explain something, but only briefly. I know there are great doctors here and I don't want to fuck up.

Also, studying for the 5 partials I have this coming Tuesday, thank goodness I have the rest of the day off after that.
 
Okay I'm gonna be a freshman in college, my major is neuroscience, any tips of what I should do?

Btw I live in the US.
 
Okay I'm gonna be a freshman in college, my major is neuroscience, any tips of what I should do?

Btw I live in the US.

I'm gonna be a junior and here is some advice you should follow.

1.) Major in something you actually like; no need to do a science only because the pre-med requirements are knocked out as well. Now if you like science, then perfect.

2.) Make grades your priority and get as close to 3.7+ GPA ideally (both science and overall).

3.) Get involved with stuff you enjoy and can see yourself committing to. Sports, clubs, service etc. NOT because it'll look good for medical school.

4.) Make sure to get the "unwritten official hours" out of the way little by little by the time you apply; these include shadowing/clinical experience, volunteering, and research.


FOR NOW MAINLY, make sure you learn how to study, manage time, and ace classes, then look into the other things once your freshman grades are awesome. If your grades aren't good, then they screen you out of the application cycle for a lot of schools. The grades and MCAT get you through the door, then you impress them with your personality, activities, etc.

Good luck!

Hey all!

Just started D.O. school about 2 weeks ago! First exam is on Monday already.

#hailmaryfullofgrace

That's always a shock for me at the beginning of every academic year since high school. "Exams already, fuck!"
 
Hey guys, first year university student (in Canada) here. I'm curious to know if you guys had any requirements as to course load when applying to medical school. My university defines a full course load as 30 credits/year. Did the med schools you applied to require anything like this?
 
So do you guys think Obamacare is going to affect the number of people who go into medicine? Seems like reimbursement schemes are going to be hammered.
 
Likely because it is still relatively early, especially for some specialties and people are a little nervous. :)

I totally understand. I got a 290 on step1 and am AOA. You think I stand a chance at matching peds? (SDN)

My res interviews don't roll out for another month or so, but prelims are coming in. Still exciting to think "I could potentially live here for a year."
 
So do you guys think Obamacare is going to affect the number of people who go into medicine? Seems like reimbursement schemes are going to be hammered.

No, people will just complain. Doctors don't have a strong lobby like nurses do. So we will get shafted and just deal with it.
 
I totally understand. I got a 290 on step1 and am AOA. You think I stand a chance at matching peds? (SDN)

My res interviews don't roll out for another month or so, but prelims are coming in. Still exciting to think "I could potentially live here for a year."

Haha, I've been glancing at SDN just to gauge how many interviews people are getting and from where. People are absurd. Excellent step scores, applying to 60-70 programs, freaking out that they are not getting enough interviews, when they have tons, some people have not received any yet and it's only been a couple days since programs received our MSPE.
 
I was afraid I wouldn't like gynecology as a course, but finally after my first review, I kind of enjoy it. Pregnancy monitoring is a bitch sometimes though ha ha.
 
Top Bottom