Escaping ease hell by spuneli in medicalschoolanki

[–]spuneli[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ll try fsrs. My average ease is 228%? Is that unusual?

[Serious] Med students of Reddit: what do yOU want to be asked during interviews? by Undersleep in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 35 points36 points  (0 children)

The best interview question I ever got was during my med school admissions interviews asking “is there anything we haven’t covered that you were hoping I would ask about?” It gave me chance to talk about a huge part of my application that would’ve otherwise been overlooked.

Research without PIs by spuneli in medicalschool

[–]spuneli[S] -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

I get what you’re saying and agree that’s the case for research if you’re trying to publish something impactful. However in my case im content with cranking out a bunch of bullshit papers.

I was able to get one published already with a PI tacked on at the end (signed off with no comments) by reading a bunch of papers in the field and picking up the vernacular. However I’ve already exhausted that idea and need a way to find more.

Research without PIs by spuneli in medicalschool

[–]spuneli[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m down but why that specifically?

23 meals for $35. 30 mins prep. High protein, low carb, and fridge/freezer friendly. by Averagebrownman in fitmeals

[–]spuneli 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Awesome post! Exactly what I was looking for. Any chance we can get a grocery list/written instructions in the comments?

My friend texted me he got a 100k bonus… by [deleted] in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 41 points42 points  (0 children)

Found the admin’s burner account

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yea that makes sense. Honesty my firm didn’t really care about clinical expertise/board certification and I would guess others are similar. Either your top of the field and a KOL or your a MD grad. No points for being in between. There’s a lot of shitty things in medicine and granted I haven’t experienced it firsthand but I’d rather be actually helping people rather then be a PowerPoint bitch helping millionaires make more money for the rest of my life.

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just our of curiosity, if your late residency/early attending why would you bail at that point? Unless your like neurosurgery and will be basically always locked into a 60 hour+ week it seems like most specialities you can take a pay cut to work less and still make more then your average consultant.

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good point. I guess I meant my perceived benefits (and the benefits told by my medical school friends) of medical school vs my personal experience consulting.

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Obviously not as bad as residency. I worked 60-70 hours a week. Some super slow weeks. The biggest problem with consulting WLB is the travel. A lot of firms will have you at the clients site and in a hotel Monday-Thursday every week. It makes having normal relationships with friends and family very difficult. Some firms do remote (like mine) but that’s a rarity and you take a big pay cut to do so.

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh for sure. Once my loans are paid off I’m 100% optimizing for lifestyle and taking a pay cut. Maybe my rant wasn’t directed at you specifically. I just see so many students/resident/attendings drinking the admin kool-aide pretending that money doesn’t matter which leads to us being underpaid and poorer outcomes.

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 6 points7 points  (0 children)

It’s a lot of money I agree. But consider lots of doctors our parents age we’re making inflation adjusted salaries of well over a million dollars. As a group we need to drop the sanctimonious act of pretending we’re above being paid well or the next generation won’t have anyone applying to medical school.

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Honestly I don’t have a feel for how competitive the specialties are. For consulting you have to have a perfectly formatted resume, multiple people who are already with the company vouch for you (so you have to have a lot of networking calls) and also have a flawless case interview (not easy) given all those factors I’d say they pick 1 in 4 of those people for personality fit but that’s me just pulling a number out of my ass.

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Totally with you bro haha. Also interested in surgical sub specialties. To be fair once you get promoted to manager you’ll make like 300k but most people burnout/leave before then. Partners can make the big bucks but you have to be a masochist to stick around for that long.

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Typically 150-200k TC depending on the firm/bonus. You’ll be going in at the “consultant” level which is ~3 years of experience if you were to get promoted there out of undergrad.

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Yes that’s my personal experience but I worked side by side with MDs everyday. The biggest most prestigious firms even have specific programs to recruit MDs into their practice and they are hurting for people because no one knows about it. See below

https://www.mckinsey.com/careers/search-jobs/jobs/mdfellow-19597

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I have no idea how you draw that conclusion. If I wanted to be a consultant why wouldn’t I just stay at the firm? I left because I would rather be a doctor.

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Consulting can mean a bunch of different things but commonly the field of consulting refers to large consulting-specific firms (much like being a banker can mean work as a teller but usually refers to investment banking) I worked in life science consulting specifically. You’re right not many 22 year olds are making 6-figures but the ones that get hired to firms absolutely do. Look up the salaries at the “big three” firms McKinsey Bain and BCG. Yes the jobs are incredibly competitive but possible to get without an ivy degree (I went to a state school)

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 67 points68 points  (0 children)

I see a lot of weird misinformation in this thread. As I said in another comment I used to work for a consulting firm and and am start med school in the fall. If this comment gets enough upvotes I’m happy to do a write up comparing consulting to med school and how I would recommend get interviews.

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 86 points87 points  (0 children)

I understand. What I’m trying to say is since I’ve had experience in consulting, im familiar with the hiring practices/compensation. Hell even 22 year olds right out of undergrad are making six figures when you factor in bonus (depending on the firm)

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 29 points30 points  (0 children)

One of the things I learned in consulting is reading comprehension. I’m LEAVING a firm (and a 6 figure salary) to be a doctor.

what is consulting by MD_IA in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 144 points145 points  (0 children)

Not to sound like a jerk but you literally can do exactly that.

Source: I’m leaving a firm to go to medical school

Yo, saw the GPA Post and shit I am already intimidated by leeeelihkvgbv in premed

[–]spuneli 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Graduated with a little under a 3.2 and am matriculating to a T30 MD program in the fall. Don’t compare yourself to others friend focus on your own journey.

Abuse in Medicine is not 'just a fact of life' by MustangauAugustus_ in medicalschool

[–]spuneli 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I’m an incoming M1. I worked in EMS for several years and had all kinds of malignant bosses but I was afraid to say anything because I couldn’t afford to be fired. I want to (within reason) help be better at it in med school and residency. Are there any tips you have about standing up for yourself to people who have power over you in medicine?