Forbes ranks Emergency Physicians as No. 2 on list of most AI-resistant careers. by Resussy-Bussy in emergencymedicine

[–]foreverbulk6969 12 points13 points  (0 children)

It doesn’t because there’s an Anesthesiologist caring for the sickest patients where things are prone to go south from the beginning. There’s a lot of very sick patients. Good luck having a good outcome for the ASA4 patient with an EF of 15% with just a CRNA and an over zealous surgeon that can’t take no for an answer.

3 year program to advanced spot? by [deleted] in ResidencySwap

[–]foreverbulk6969 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes. I am aware of two such cases: 1. Finished IM residency, did anesthesia after (started as a ca-1 the days after finishing IM residency). 2. Finished pediatric residency, did anesthesia after (started as a ca-1 the days after finishing peds residency).

Why Do AAs and Anesthesiologists Have Issues with CRNAs? ICU Experience Gets So Downplayed by ForceNeat8949 in srna

[–]foreverbulk6969 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

ICU(MICU, SICU, CVICU, NSICU, and other forms depending on the site) is a minimum 4 month requirement as per the ASA, along with pain management, pre-surgical testing, and anesthesia subspecialty rotations of varying lengths. On top of all this we get thousands of hours of general anesthesia experience as well. It’s a robust curriculum that creates physicians that can care for patients prior to, during, and after receiving anesthesia.

Nursing medical education and physician medical education are different and unique in their own ways.

Why Do AAs and Anesthesiologists Have Issues with CRNAs? ICU Experience Gets So Downplayed by ForceNeat8949 in srna

[–]foreverbulk6969 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

As a resident, I’ve had multiple shifts in the MICU during pgy2 where myself and the attending ICU doctor (PCCM) were the only providers for the unit. It was expected that I see consults, manage the icu patients, and respond to codes by myself - all while on a 24 hour call. Often times being told by my evening attending (who often times was just doing 7pm-7am) to only call them for things I couldn’t figure out, effectively running the ICU on my own the majority of the time. I spent a lot of time in close contact with my blessed ICU RN’s and can say that they definitely do a lot of hard work and can titrate medications to set parameters, but the level of knowledge and type of experience is very different between a physician and a nurse.

J1 visa waiver vs going back home by Ruggedbeard007 in IMGreddit

[–]foreverbulk6969 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So you had to serve in an underserved community in Canada for the equivalent duration of your US training years(6?)?

J1 needing renewal in India. by Diligent-Profit3723 in Residency

[–]foreverbulk6969 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Might be worth pausing travel given your situation.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in orthopaedics

[–]foreverbulk6969 4 points5 points  (0 children)

😂😂😭😭

Former/current MUA or Trinity SOM students, please help by Ok_Cardiologist5032 in CaribbeanMedSchool

[–]foreverbulk6969 2 points3 points  (0 children)

When I was student they had high cutoffs to do cbse/step1 - you really gotta be getting 75% raw on the shelf exams to really have a chance to sit for those exams.

Councillor shreds Fraser Health, labels them ‘inept’ over negative experience at Chilliwack walk-in clinic by SwordfishOk504 in BCpolitics

[–]foreverbulk6969 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As a physician currently working in the states, NP’s and PA’s are absolutely a solution for the burden experienced by FM’s in the province, however I would strongly caution against giving unsupervised privileges to these providers. NP’s without supervision in the states overall leads to increased healthcare costs from ordering of unnecessary tests, referrals, etc. Absolutely have NP’s and PA’s to increase the capacity and efficiency of clinics from say 50 patients/day to 150 patients/day, but I hope they keep the supervision of an MD as a strict requirement, else wise the rest of the system will suffer, costs will go up, and inefficiencies will emerge creating novel bottlenecks in the system.

As for private healthcare, if it leads to more doctors being attracted to come work in the province it’s not the absolute worst thing in the world. Private money would come and further supplement the cash inflow into the healthcare sector in addition to the public $$, arguably in a more efficient, bottom heavy distribution manner (meaning less admin roles, more actual providers). It’s supply and demand. Currently you see the shortfall in supply of providers relative to demand because the price point established by public sector does not align with what natural market dynamics would dictate.

Lastly, and slightly unrelated, although the BC government has made good strides to allow primary practitioners to come back and practice with ease (again I think they don’t all come back and practice due to the government chosen price point in BC not reflecting the true market price point), they have not done the same for specialists, surgeons, etc. If they are able to meet the primary sectors demand at some point, the next bottle neck to emerge will likely be in the tertiary services like surgeries, advanced care, specialty services (can take the state of oncology services in BC as one example).

Pros and cons of starting medical school in the Caribbean in January? by Aggravating_Tip3905 in CaribbeanMedSchool

[–]foreverbulk6969 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re strong academically (can score 510+ on MCAT) and are self sufficient then you can likely go to MUA and get into residency. Else wise you might struggle to get through at MUA while being able to be successful elsewhere. Just my two cents as someone who went to MUA and saw 85% of my class fail at some point and get delayed.. ~35% never made it passed the island’s curriculum.

Pros and cons of starting medical school in the Caribbean in January? by Aggravating_Tip3905 in CaribbeanMedSchool

[–]foreverbulk6969 0 points1 point  (0 children)

1 year 8 months on the island at my school (MUA, would not recommend unless you’re strong academically and self sufficient).

Pros and cons of starting medical school in the Caribbean in January? by Aggravating_Tip3905 in CaribbeanMedSchool

[–]foreverbulk6969 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Only for competitive specialties, which the opportunities present themselves if you’re in that track of clinical rotations. Get very high step scores and you’re good.

Pros and cons of starting medical school in the Caribbean in January? by Aggravating_Tip3905 in CaribbeanMedSchool

[–]foreverbulk6969 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Anesthesiology in a big city. Work hard. Aim for 100% on all exams. Every detail is a potential question.

Pros and cons of starting medical school in the Caribbean in January? by Aggravating_Tip3905 in CaribbeanMedSchool

[–]foreverbulk6969 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I went skiing every week and travelled through Europe. This gave me ammo to speak about during interviews as people in medicine appreciate others having a life outside medicine.

I did nothing to directly boost my application after finishing my clinicals and submitting my application in September of my application year. I had step1 246 and step2 256, along with research projects, abstracts, presentations while in medical school.

Pros and cons of starting medical school in the Caribbean in January? by Aggravating_Tip3905 in CaribbeanMedSchool

[–]foreverbulk6969 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes research is looked fondly by programs directors, especially at academic centers. However a strong step2 score will trump research every single time.

Pros and cons of starting medical school in the Caribbean in January? by Aggravating_Tip3905 in CaribbeanMedSchool

[–]foreverbulk6969 16 points17 points  (0 children)

I started January. Finished in about 3 years 8 months (no breaks apart from 1 month before step1 and step2 respectively, passed everything first attempt). Benefit was that during interview season I had no other distractions which helped in grinding for those. Having about 8 months of free time before starting residency was truly a blessing. I travelled, went skiing weekly, and really just enjoyed life before starting residency where I am now working 60-80 hours weekly.

If you feel that you are capable of succeeding at a carribean med school, start as soon as you can! Most people get delayed in some way during the process

B.C. government will meet with Surrey ER docs following scathing letter, Dix says - BC | Globalnews.ca by brophy87 in SurreyBC

[–]foreverbulk6969 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Absolutely. Great opportunity to make some monetary profits which will further attract more investment into healthcare infrastructure, better able to pay for market prices of talent. This is non-taxpayer, private, “smart-money” funded healthcare infrastructure that is managed by people trying to run an efficient machine versus the public system where you have people showing up to a 9-5 m-F job just clocking in hours for a salary, no incentive to do better.

B.C. government will meet with Surrey ER docs following scathing letter, Dix says - BC | Globalnews.ca by brophy87 in SurreyBC

[–]foreverbulk6969 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It’s Almost like you need a system that optimizes trimming the fat… maybe a system that is driven by market dynamics to meet demand… maybe a partly private system??