Cardiology as a do reddit Please seek professional help or other forums for this inquiry. Never interviewed one, never will. Apparently Cleveland clinic matched 19 to cardiology with 100% match rate last year. If you can stomach three years more of training and sacrificing some work-life balance. Once you have your basic sciences mastered, learning about cardiovascular physiology and detailed cardiac anatomy will be important (what coronary artery supplies what part of the heart? So In my experience, you do not need a certificate to be employed at MOST hospitals as a monitor technician. They were billing for services and their documentation was very poor. . ncbi. Also if you happen to be an interventional cardiologist what does your hospital do to prevent over radiation, and do you wear lead headgear to prevent blasting your brain with xray. But you cannot do that for RCIS which is the way to go if you’re wanting to get into interventional cardiology. You can call back on general cards or medicine as needed second what above poster said about colleagues/support. However, it is becoming increasingly common for programs to offer an unaccredited second year of IC training with a specific focus on structural training to their fellows. Lifestyle is more job dependent, not specialty dependent. However, many practices don’t support that many caths and structural heart procedures between four full-time interventional cardiologists and any invasive cardiologist who do diagnostic angios. Same with cardiology If your aim is to just match into cardiology fellowship then as long as you have research and good letters of recommendation you should be in fair shape to match into a community cardiology program. It depends on how motivated or interested you are. I've been wondering: Are there things about ECGs that make Cardiology SpRs think, "I wish they knew this already"? I mean, we all have our specialities, right? Like, if I'm referring someone to Neurology, I'm not going to pretend I can do their deep-dive neuro exams. All the APPs rotate through. Worth noting that cardiology admissions were handled by a resident on 24hr call, and we only had to staff admissions to the CCU with the resident. The reason I ask is because in actual practice, there is a lot more to “doing procedures” than just working with hands. Instead of asking, "how do we improve stethoscope skills?" it should be, "How do we get ultrasound probes and training into physicians hands?" See this impressive study where first year medical students with an ultrasound wiped the floor with cardiologists with a stethoscope in diagnosing cardiac murmurs. They do general cards with interventional responsibility. You have to do 3 years of IM. Cardiac nurses don’t do cardiac for the hell of it - they do it because they love it. Medical school is a set curriculum, but you could do electives your fourth year in cardiology if you’re still interested at that time. Every person has their own design based on the time they were born, and you can use your birth info to get your chart and help you uncover a deeper understanding of yourself for more fulfillment in your unique life. If you aren't excited by the plumbing issues, maybe do the electrical work. If you get into an IM residency at an institution with a cardio fellowship, you have a great shot at getting in. I'm a cardiology fellow and half of my knowledge in the lab comes from the cath staff that lives and breathe interventional cardiology, I'm just passing through for 3 months out of the year. I don't think we will see too many more ACHD docs. Quantify of life is better. I love working in the CICU, managing shock, MCS, etc. Our interventional radiology department does that for their RTs. Sure, I would love to work 10 hours per week instead, but for pretty normal hours I make a lot of money and enjoy the job. thru the day. EDIT: Thank you for the responses here and in my DMs. Just had a massive heart attack. Most important thing is passion about what i do. I wouldn’t focus on how passionate your colleagues are. I know plenty who work more, but I also know several who work "more reasonable" hours. Just do your best on Step 2, show interest during your rads rotation(s), and try to do some kind of research. We just don’t do that at my facility. The closest they get to exercise is eating, and you can imagine if a baby's heart is having to work extra hard because the blood flow is inefficient, they're going to look like they're getting a workout. I'm sure there's a chance you can get a cardiology residency as a D. Our imaging attendings can read from home over zoom if they need to. Had stent put in, and wearing portable defribulator. 4. There is no single path in Cardiology. To be honest the reality is that as a cardiology attending (atleast in private and hospital employed set ups) you work atleast as much, if not more than as a fellow. My question would be if you were me would you follow your dreams or settle for less and have a residency in non invasive cardiology. nlm. That's the DO life. It’s where you do residency, which is in part a product of step scores. In addition, there are many who do a lot of work at home: writing notes, following up on patients, hospital administration, trying to do research, creating talks for residents, etc) No one in cardiology bats an eye at these hours. Ct surgery is a different story. 2. There's no reason why gen cards should have a poor lifestyle. I always make sure to explain that despite it being called heart failure, it’s a condition that can be managed and you can live for another couple decades if your condition is managed correctly. EP cardiology is sort of my white whale- super intriguing (I’ve had 2 EP studies and 2 ablations done for A fib in my 20’s) but seems unattainable. I am a 3rd year med student who is battling IM and Cardiology and I very much feel like Sysiphius. 1. That can be a one-year program. Before you post a survey, please notify the mods. You don’t need exposure advanced HF to do general inpatient practice/interventional/EP, a lot of their bread and butter is transplant but they do a lot of things with shock. There are many posts about this in Reddit and SDN but here are some general pointers: If you are finishing up residency, focus your efforts on studying for the IM boards in August because you don't want to retake this exam in the middle of cardiology fellowship. The important factor here is not ur step or comlex score. You are one wrenched back or table saw accident from not being able to work. Human Design is a system of human differentiation - it's a system that helps you uncover and understand what makes you unique and truly you. There are no emergent 3AM afib ablations. However, we do need cardiothoracic surgery for cases in which interventionists cannot do with their procedures, or in which the results/patient outcomes would not be as good as the surgical option. For instance, a patient with 3-vessel coronary artery disease would benefit most from bypass surgery rather than having 3 stents placed as it has If you want to maximize your chances of getting into a program, do what you can in medical school to beef up your resume, but also consider visiting one or more of these programs for an away rotation and try to be very engaged while there. I’m sure not literally everyone who you know interested in cardiology will ultimately do it, but that’s also because a lot of people by the end of IM residency are ready to practice and make an attending salary vs 3+ more years of training. I am not in a position to go back to school for any sort of MD, but can see myself getting an applied science associates to get started and then taking on additional training/education while in A subreddit covering the evolving evidence base in cardiology and cardiothoracic surgery. I apologize if this question has been addressed previously, though I have scoured through the net and even asked the PD of my Cardiology fellowship program this question: I am a PGY-1 DO halfway through my intern year who will be applying for Cardiology fellowship when my time comes. I don’t like procedures. You do need to have had a successful completion of a rhythm interpretation course/program and/or one year of experience in telemetry/monitor surveillance. You make crazy money but you truly work for it. Maybe a better question would have been, what is the lifestyle in General Cardiology like. 6. Feb 8, 2015 · I know that it's possible to specialize as a DO. most people don’t do pure IC. Cardiology is infinitely more fun than internal medicine. We are trained health professionals with Cardiology training only. As others have said first year of cardiology fellowship is more work than being an internal medicine resident but less stressful. - Work hard and do all the right things as a resident (you know this). In summary you need to be better than a typical MD applicant to stand out if you are a DO. I know GI or even PCPs, as well as other gen cardiologists, with much worse lifestyle than me. Then, our 1st-year transplant fellow quit and a DO scrambled into the position. WE DO NOT GIVE MEDICAL ADVICE. Hey everyone! SHO here with a soft spot for Cardiology. Each of those steps is a career option in its own rightso if you are not sure, it’s not a bad option. Pretending to be a physio gets you banned. Help your fellow Redditors crack the electrical code. Everyone in my class applying rads felt they underperformed relative to our MD counterparts in the Match but we still made it. EM was the right choice for me but cardiology is a damn good gig. If u don’t take or do well on step, you likely aren’t landing a university based residency, and therefore your odds of matching fellowship with a “good” application go from say 90 percent down to somewhere between 30-70 percent depending on quality of your A subreddit covering the evolving evidence base in cardiology and cardiothoracic surgery. At the end of the day cardiology fellowship training will be what you make out Im pursuing my nursing BSN with the intent to go to med school after (MD or DO) do osteopathic medical schools have a good chance at matching with cardiology ? My current doctor is a DO in psychiatry and thats my second choice but i just wanted some info, also are there any DO schools that dont require pre reqs apart from the MCAT? A subreddit covering the evolving evidence base in cardiology and cardiothoracic surgery. To do this, I would try to switch into as many cardiology rotations, do a good job, and then ask for LOR. Midwest is friendlier. I don’t do procedures, but do schedule patients for cardiac / vascular procedures if needed. Cardiology -> IC isn’t that difficult afaik. . Nuclear cardiology technologist (NMT or similar) - similar schooling to the above. After 10 years you get 5 weeks vacation. Practically, the amount of call necessitates at least a four person interventional cardiology team if you want to have any QOL. O. The ICU and cardiology have differing goals. Do cardiology. I. I liked IM, but 3 years is too much especially because alot of cardiology requires subspecialization Alot of egos in academic cardiology Clinical volume is on the high side, especially if you want to make a lot of $$$. Absolute epitome of available/affable/able. But it seems that to get there you’re overworked and very competitive to get there. I can't emphasize this enough. It also let's me have my non-unit weeks be different. I have heard that some APPs in different areas can scrub with their physicians on procedures. if you have a stellar application and get connections. It’s fairly unique in that you you do medicinal and general cardiology before subspecializing in interventional cardiology or EP (if you choose to). Matching directly into a categorical position is close to impossible as a DO. However going off personal experience (just matched cardiology) and a few fellow DO colleagues who matched into Cards and GI, it’s about connections, research, and how well regarded you are within the program. The amount of "tailoring" you can do depends on the employer. On the flip side, and this may not be the case in this situation, but if you're an adult and your primary care doctor refers you to cardiology for uncomplicated HTN or HLD, to endocrinology for uncomplicated diabetes, to dermatology for poison ivy, and to GI for uncomplicated heartburn you may want to just get a PPO insurance plan and cut out the middle man or find a better primary doctor I agree that the need is increasing, but look at what you wrote: "I do Gen cards, ACHD and Echo. They may or may not be able to accommodate a cardiology clinic. I don’t know where this keeps coming from, but the pay nor the lifestyle is like a hospitalist. In community hepatologist does general GI call. MCI 100% blockage RCA lower part of heart. They have to do something to narrow the stack. A subreddit dedicated to San José, California, the heart of the Silicon Valley. I quit after four days; before I got further in the credentialing process and found my current job where I have been almost a year. Cardiology makes solid money, maybe not the best $/effort but still good. The only thing I can think of is that you would get OJT and then become CVT. if the apex is rounded and not bullet shaped, you are off axis I will say that prior to this job, I had accepted another outpatient cardiology job for like 98k, doing the same exact thing. You can do cardiology fellowship before IM residency, as I've seen several FMGs do in less competitive specialties like ID or nephro, you just can't become board-eligible in cardiovascular disease until you are board certified in internal medicine. It’s like you do cardiology and then do EP. Again, my specific and limited perspective. With fellowship around the corner and frequent brutal home calls in sight, I'm wondering how stressful gen cards is as a full attending? Unlike other subspecalists (GI, renal) I feel that cardiologist end up being primary a lot of time in the hospital. We do our best. Thankfully we have a big enough team to do so few weekends and holidays. I work in a very tight knit pcu that works directly with a very successful cardiology practice in a large city - the relationships you build are as important as your knowledge base. EP doesn't really have emergencies but procedures and cath lab time can disrupt things. - Be willing to move anywhere in the country. DO NOT ASK FOR IT AND DO NOT GIVE IT. Like you said, it's a growing and rather new field in cardiology and I'm hoping to help shape that growth. This is the right answer. That is why I always tell everyone pursuing cardiology that only do it if you really enjoy the busy lifestyle or atleast can A subreddit covering the evolving evidence base in cardiology and cardiothoracic surgery. Group of 12. Most cardiologists do a few of the above and their hours and salary vary based on which. I'm hoping to do a lot of non-invasive time during those weeks. Do what you're interested in and find the right job. Ours didn’t. Learn your cards. Call 3-4x/month, 1wknd/2months by phone, once you leave hospital rarely have to come in, hospitalist/icu help a lot. He blew everyone away and stayed on as a transplant surgery attending. It requires all the little hamsters in your brain to constantly run; just so you could get a basic grasp of whatever in actual loving earth is happening with the heart. Now as attending, we are consult only except for the advanced heart failure team which is mostly separate anyways. I do 50hrs/wk. Learning new things everyday, remembering why i chose this field, being able to provide patients the best care, and ofcourse making a good living. If you like cardiology it’s absolutely worth to do it. IC is physically demanding. You could do the CVT route and get your 600hrs - easy in a year if you work full time. https://pubmed. Lots of paper work on gen med rotations. you should not be called overnight. Welcome to /r/Electricians Reddit's International Electrical Worker Community aka The Great Reddit Council of Electricians Talk shop, show off pictures of your work, and ask code related questions. In community it’s different; EP might be asked to cover gen cards. do u know how to do quality improvement? u should present ur work somewhere as well. You will need to do 12 months in oz to get your full registration with AHPRA to even apply to BPT and the academic year in oz starts in February; so if you came out post F2, this would likely be 18 months in an unaccredited position before commencing BPT so you should factor this in. Listen to your patient’s nurses. Theres a reason why it takes hundreds if not thousands of scans to become a skilled echocardiographer! As a beginner the most important thing is to know your limitations and not jump to conclusions that might lead you down the wrong Mx path, its good that you have insight into when you are off axis. You should be making connections with your institution’s cardiologists as they will likely be the people who know you the best and can vouch for you. Nov 2, 2016 · I know cardiology is one of the most competitive IM fellowships, so I was wondering if a med student needs complete it at a top academic university, or can he/she apply broadly and have a chance at getting it somewhere less known? Jul 27, 2015 · DOs in cardiology exist, but are in the minority. You can then do a fellowship (interventional, electrophysiology, congenital, intensive care). I can’t really say much about primary care versus cardiology but I’m in a unique position to weigh in on IM vs cards. I do know that it’s overall more difficult, but doable, for DOs to match into gen surg. They have fellows best interests in mind so you have to put your ego aside. Then I know a community program who had 7 applications to cardiology with 0 match, and that included a chief resident. If you’re in an exclusive EP practice…. I think we will see that most ACHD docs do less general cardiology. My neighbor is a cardiologist. so much. Listen to your attending. Wᴇʟᴄᴏᴍᴇ ᴛᴏ ʀ/SGExᴀᴍs – the largest community on reddit discussing education and student life in Singapore! SGExams is also more than a subreddit - we're a registered nonprofit that organises initiatives supporting students' academics, career guidance, mental health and holistic development, such as webinars and mentorship A subreddit covering the evolving evidence base in cardiology and cardiothoracic surgery. gen cards is the backbone of any cardiology department. Also cardiology is a longer route than Ortho as well, not even including advanced fellowships TLDR: Cardiology is a great, cognitively gratifying field with many options and practice options with hours similar to ortho. I’m a cardiology AT in Australia having completed F2 in the UK and then leaving in 2017. It’s a job. Cardiology is one of the coolest specialities: cool physiology, diseases, procedures, and tests (echos/ecgs). If you can get through the fellowship I’d do it. do u have LoRs from the big names at ur program? ideally u should have letters from ur department chief, program director, any other big names at ur program. Typically would get 5-10 calls a night overall. 7 speed/15 min row/15 min elip at good bp and 140 pulse. If you want to do 40 hour weeks and be there for your kids, you just have to find a group practice that will let you work 2-3 days in clinic and read echos from home. Well, babies don't do much: they eat, sleep, poop, and pee. Also going through the match a second time for fellowship is not ideal. Because you took your class 3 years ago, I’d advise you take the CRAT. Pros/cons. You would do nuclear cardiology imaging studies (mostly stress tests). 3. So if you love EP go for it, there will be plenty of general cardiology to do if you want it A subreddit covering the evolving evidence base in cardiology and cardiothoracic surgery. As of now, I am thinking about working as an outpatient cardiology PA following graduation. It’s worth it bc I love cardiology as do most of my partners. If you don't your post will be locked until you do. If cardiology is what excites you, do a cardiology rotation and kill them with hard work and enthusiasm. this means u need to get alot of face time. " The overwhelming majority of fellowship-trained ACHD cardiologists that I know do mostly general cardiology. When I was a surgery resident (10-15 years ago) DO applications went straight into the trash. Moreover, CC and pulm go together so most CC docs will have a pulm clinic. Your salary will reflect this. Meaning that as an EP doctor you could do as much Internal Medicine or General cardiology as you want, but as a general cardiologist you’re never going to be doing ablations and unless you practice in a rural area you’ll never do pacemakers. To do things like TAVR, you need IC training at a program that includes the skill set to do these procedures. The one guy who really just did cards to do it is miserable and frankly a bad clinician who we all hate working with. You may or may not take call with this job. I'm sure there's jobs that do less, but work load and schedule can vary greatly by job. Thanks! There's also interventional cardiology but even though I quite enjoyed the theory I found the procedures to be somewhat boring/monotonous during my rotations, so I don't think I could do that. e. I have a job at a pseudo private practice (fully private, but embedded deeply in a big academic center) where I work 40-50 hours most weeks and make an average cardiology salary. Hopefully your colleagues and attendings are helpful because you rely on them for help when you don't know how to manage a patient with complicated cardiac issues. learn your medicine. Even many (most?) first-year cardiology fellows often don’t know what they want. Gen cards probably has it mildest. But I work at a county hospital (cardiology nurse) and many patients struggle with health literacy+compliance. 7-5, 5 days/wk. Thank you all nonetheless. This forum is designed for Cardiology questions. The other route is gen surg to ct surgery, which I can’t comment how hard this is. 5. Ejection fraction rate was 40% on admission, 25 in hospital and 35 upon discharge. There are so many things you don't know and you are transitioning from being an internist as a PGY3 to a "cardiology intern" as PGY4. The answer is rooted in ABIM and not necessarily the hospitals that want to work you to the bone. Intensivist can place a pacer, you can do pacemaker in AM. , state your location. Cardiology practice is extremely varied: can be more invasive/interventional or imaging-based; focus on acute treatment or prevention/rehab; devote time to research or stay purely clinical; favour an academic setting vs community based practice etc. General cardiology is and will always be in high demand especially now with in the era of imaging. Could also consider using your free / flexible outpatient time or electives to do clinic every few weeks with 1 cardiology attending throughout the rest of this year - you can get a LOR from this person who will talk about your outpt cards If you match into a big transplant center but your goal is interventional cardiology out in community, to be honest all that exposure wouldn't mean that match. And then you continue to work hard as an attending as well. DO NOT ASK FOR MEDICAL ADVICE OR OPINION. My program had 450+ applications and interviewed 70 for a class of <10 first-years. /r/SanJose will be going dark between 12-14th June in protest against Reddit's API changes which will kill 3rd party apps like Apollo, Reddit is Fun, and BaconReader. Sports cards A subreddit covering the evolving evidence base in cardiology and cardiothoracic surgery. This is especially true in a field like cardiology where the procedures are often emergent and complications may be deadly. I was a full time hospitalist, now I’m a cardiology fellow, and I still moonlight as a hospitalist. - Realize that getting into any cardiology fellowship is 90% of the battle and be happy with any cardiology fellowship that you are able to match to. You have nothing to worry about. The nurse I got report from said that the last echocardiogram showed an EF of 46% and he also said that cardiology had mentioned something about ventricular insufficiency, but because he didn't understand all of it he tuned it the rest of the reasoning for why the team decided not to do diltiazem. Also many more consults and sick people. I'm not looking for this to be an MD vs. At the same time if your interest is academic medicine, matching into big name programs would be vital. It's not hard at all. Depends on if your program allows you to do away rotations, it can be difficult with arranging for funding. You can't do all that and cover the ICU. Some when on echo work completely from home. I spend as much time with cardiothoracic as I do with the gen guys. 4th week of Cardiac rehab is going great, running @ 15 min tread @ 3. I wanted to do cardiology for awhile but ultimately decided anesthesia was right for me It’s worth it. Cardiology is a good path to pursue for these goals. In my country the cardiology residents only do 2 years of IM and then 4 years of cardiology for a total of 6 years training, and then you’re a general cardiologist. I am a little apprehensive about going into cardiology as my first job. DO thing, but I just want to know if getting into a competitive IM residency and then cardiology fellowship is possible as a DO considering the residencies will all be merging in the future. Late reply, but just to clarify, according to the European Society of Cardiology, CCTA is preferred only if PTP probability of CAD = low, if it's high then stress imaging is still recommended unless there is resistance to pharmacotherapy or a positive clinical profile (in case of which you go straight to angio + revascularization). Use the search function. We are not equipped and do not have the training to handle mental health or health anxiety questions. I'll be doing my critical care fellowship this coming year. A cardiologist is going to cover consults, read echos/nukes/TEEs and do clinic, often all in the same week. Love for cardiology. If you can tolerate it and it can facilitate a lifestyle that you want then do it. A subreddit covering the evolving evidence base in cardiology and cardiothoracic surgery. People call you alot for dumb stuff when they don't want to think A subreddit covering the evolving evidence base in cardiology and cardiothoracic surgery. To clarify, I do have a supportive husband and child. You don’t need to love what you do. The APPs do clinic and consults/round on in pts, but an APP can't read all the echos/stress tests/etc. Would I be pigeonholing myself and hurting my chances of moving into other specialties if I decide to do so later on? just wanted the opinion of current physician assistants. Looking places like mass gen, Emory, Cleveland clinic who match like 15+ to cardiology each year. Cardiology is just. gov/16188532/ A subreddit covering the evolving evidence base in cardiology and cardiothoracic surgery. I am interested in Non-Invasive Cardiology. This subreddit is for medical professionals only. The call has been rough at times due to that, but also just the nature of emergent heart issues. nih. You also need to pass these boards to be eligible for the general cardiology boards. this is the stuff that generates the majority of revenue despite not being sexy or cutting edge. IC worst due to STEMI. Days are mostly clinic, squeezing in echo reads, stress tests, nuc, inpatients, etc. a good general cardiologist should be able to do nukes, echoes/tees, stresses, etc. There is definite bias here as some fellowships will not interview any DOs (or IMGs) as a screening method. Since these opinions one's experience in rotations during med school can vary a lot, I would love to hear from some people who matched into cardiac Cardiac sonographer (RCS or similar) - you do a medical sonography program (again, typically 2 years or less) and then you can do echocardiograms. generalists bear the burnt of garbage inpatient/outpatient consults so that interventionalists/ep can spend more time in the lab putting in devices/stents or A subreddit covering the evolving evidence base in cardiology and cardiothoracic surgery. When you have physio-related questions about work, studying etc. Also, 60-70% of what interventional cards does is general cardiology. gddpn wbzzq bbxxkt lsbb hagoqm flnf kebol ifaeh usjoxkz bsxqr