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its all just so interesting and i have the brains and drive to do it so nothing is to hard i just dont want to end up in the wrong profession

2007-07-06 17:15:24 · 6 answers · asked by 123456 2 in Business & Finance Careers & Employment Health Care

6 answers

if you want to have a lucrative practice:

dermatologists - not needed at nights, no emergency, you can enjoy holidays
cardiologist - lots of emergency cases even at night, since your clientele will be elderly (its very rare to have a young person with a heart problem)
endocrinologist -same description above as cardio; specialty will be diabetes, hormones,etc
pediatrician - minimal but still have emergencies, kids are great!
surgery - also with emergencies

though i said lucrative, they are also rewarding if you really want the field.

what you should think twice about:
pulmonologists -you will be exposed to lung infections such as TB, etc
anesthesiologists -lucrative but one mistake and the pateint is a goner
surgery, anes, derma, gastroenterologists, ob-gyn - i mentioned them again bec you can only be good as long as hands are steady and this happens only when you are young. when you reach 50s, its not steady anymore..

2007-07-07 00:59:23 · answer #1 · answered by yeye28 4 · 0 0

I think you should investigate what type of specialty you are interested in-peds,internal medicine, surgery,medical research,neurology, etc. I would see if you can spend a day with your family doctor or any physicians you might know. Volunteer at hospital to get a real feel to what happens everyday. This might clear a few things you are unsure of. Many physcians are quitting due the high cost of malpractice and dealing with insurance companies. Have you thought about Nursing-huge demand, dentistry, You have to do something you love or have high interest in. Many people get degrees but found out they hate it such as accounting or teaching. You can always change especially if you are young There is no perfect profession. I was biology/medical technologist major and went into medical sales. Good luck!!!!!

2007-07-06 17:42:48 · answer #2 · answered by Tony P 1 · 0 0

I have under no circumstances long past to clinical university, so I might be incorrect, however I have heard that it's only as difficult to be a dentist as it's to be a surgeon, so I could say opt for being a surgeon as they've extra status, reduce suicide charges, and so on. EDIT: I will have to upload, I imply that the educational is simply as rigorous, from what I've heard. Actually BEING a dentist, possibly now not as intellectually difficult, however mainly monotonous, disheartening, mainly even simply difficult at the hands to preserve them suspended over folks's hands all day. On a different observe, I have a nephew coaching to be a chiropractor and I used to be instead amazed on the quantity of education and the level in their clinical coaching! So...you maybe amazed of the clinical advantage/history of a few of these "peripheral" clinical authorities.

2016-09-05 17:39:54 · answer #3 · answered by dunkelberger 4 · 0 0

Don't worry about what field of medicine until you finish medical school. You will get an internship and meet lots of doctors. If you love working with people you can open a practice, if you would rather people were asleep and not talking you could be a brain surgeon. If you like your people dead become a medical examiner. If you rather not have anything to do with people you can work as a researcher.

2007-07-06 17:23:40 · answer #4 · answered by shipwreck 7 · 0 0

During your residency, following graduation of medical school, you will be required to rotate through the various medical services at the institution you are completing your residency training at. After several rotations through, then you might be able to decide what specialty residency program you wish to apply to or if you decided earlier, you might decide to change your mind.

2007-07-06 17:31:58 · answer #5 · answered by Su Z Cue 2 · 0 0

First of all it's most important to know how to spell.

2007-07-07 09:45:12 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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