So the last time we spoke I had just finished Emergency Medicine. I have since also completed my Geriatrics rotation. This was my first medical inpatient rotation. I really enjoyed this rotation and part of that has to do with the 4 day weekends. But I also enjoyed it because it showed me an area of medicine that I was interested in pursuing.
Notice I say "was." I'm still interested in Hospitalist medicine but it's definitely a lot more stressful than I thought it would be. You are responsible for EVERY SINGLE PROBLEM THEY'VE EVER HAD! That's a shit ton of things to be held accountable for. Now it's not that I don't want to help these patients. But when you have failed to control your blood sugar, hypertension, high cholesterol and never stopped smoking... well I just don't think it's fair how much liability is put on me. If you're not willing to take care of yourself, then why should that be put on me?
I also got a lot of experience in the ICU. This was particularly helpful because my elective rotation was going to be in critical care. I got a good sense of what you see in the ICU. It's normally either very old people that should be in hospice, very complicated patients that I mentioned before, or rarely acutely sick people that make full recoveries. The reason I was interested in critical care was because of those few acutely ill people that have the potential to have good recoveries. So I still maintain interest for critical care, just not as exclusively. I enjoy the complicated inter-system workings of the field, but it rarely even matters that I understand why things are going wrong. Getting a patient to "stable" isn't nearly as satisfying as I thought it would be. Because of this exposure to critical care I decided that I didn't need a rotation dedicated to critical care to know what it's all about.
During didactic year class I was always very interested in Urology, but the only elective we had was in Uro-oncology. That was a little too specific for my interest, but nonetheless a very important and relevant aspect of Urology. While in geriatrics we had a couple of urologists lecture to us and it reminded my past interest. It was also quite obvious that Urologists love what they do. They don't seem as burnt out and they seem to get gratification from what they do. One urologist also pointed out that this is becoming a very PA in demand field. Urologist are finding great ways to utilize PAs and other PAs are telling me it's a great PA field.
All this being said I still have no idea what PAs do in urology. I don't know what kind of patients they see in clinic, what their role is like in surgery or what kind of procedures they get to do on their own. So I decided this is what an elective rotation is suppose to be used for. I have an area of medicine that I'm interested in but don't have a clue what day-to-day is like. My clinical coordinator gave me a little grief saying I'm always changing my mind on my elective but said it was an easy enough change. In my defense I only asked her once about her thoughts on me doing CT-Surg. I've never actually changed my elective before.
This rotation isn't Uro-oncology though. She told me that we have a general urology rotation at our affiliated hospital. She also said they are BEGGING her for students, which often means they are looking to hire. I would DIE to get a job at this hospital since it's TWO blocks from the apartment I'm moving to this upcoming summer. I won't deny that this also plays a role into my decision.
I'm currently doing pediatrics. I've only been there for 2 days and I already have a cold. I guess that's what happens when you are holding a kid down that's getting an IV and they're spitting into your mouth.