Pros & Cons of Family Medicine | VLOGmas 2021 ep. 3

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  • čas přidán 3. 12. 2021
  • If I were to do it all over again, I would still choose family medicine.
    Keep in Touch!
    Wyatt, London, and I and fairly active on instastories. Follow us / dr.jennale if you are interested in more behind the scenes of medicine/hospital and home life!
    Check out our favorite amazon products: www.amazon.com/shop/jennyle
    DISCLAIMER: This video is for educational purposes only. This should not replace the speciality or counseling of your physician.
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Komentáře • 57

  • @kelly1827
    @kelly1827 Před 2 lety +18

    A great Family Medicine doc is worth their weight in gold! I love mine, and each specialist who he has referred me to always remarked about how focused but thorough his initial workup was. He's really kind, and embraces a collaborative approach. One of the other docs in the practice is much more paternalistic, which is surprising since they're the same age. I saw the other one once for a sick visit and 5 minutes into the visit I wanted to walk out. If I didn't have my positive, respectfulexperiences with my doctor I probably would leave that practice.
    I told my doctor he needs to train and hire a few who have his approach because when he retires I'll cry trying to find one like him!

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před 2 lety

      I’ve had several new patients cry during their office visit with me because their original pcp retired. Do you have specifics - like things that your doctor does that makes you feel comfortable, heard, valued, etc.

  • @richurichu8781
    @richurichu8781 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Coming back to those two bundle of happiness probably melt away all your exhaustion from work i guess!!!

  • @SuperPonySparkles
    @SuperPonySparkles Před 2 lety +6

    I'm about to go to school to become a Family Medicine Physician and this helped out SO MUCHHHHHH omg this vid was perfect.You sound like such a sweet person omgggg!!!! Now I have a better understanding of what I wanna do lol.

  • @edkensalexandre7043
    @edkensalexandre7043 Před 2 lety +12

    These boys are soooooo precious!!! Omg. The icecream part “melted” my heart

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před 2 lety +1

      Melted! 🤣 that’s so cute

  • @rcevallos1a
    @rcevallos1a Před 2 lety +1

    I love the medicine related content!

  • @Adoctorfrombrazil
    @Adoctorfrombrazil Před 8 měsíci

    My favorite specialty!

  • @tinasmith-desrosiers708
    @tinasmith-desrosiers708 Před 2 lety +2

    I LOVED THIS VIDEO! THANKS!

  • @Sorawld
    @Sorawld Před 2 lety +6

    London looks exactly like how Wyatt did at that age! Adorable boys 🥰

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před 2 lety +1

      My phone pop up a memory of when I was in residency and I had to do a double take! I couldn’t tell which kid it was 😅 until I looked at the date. It also doesn’t help that London wears all of Wyatt’s hand-me-downs.

    • @Sorawld
      @Sorawld Před 2 lety

      @@drjennale hahaha that’s so funny that you couldn’t tell between the two either!

  • @ciararobb8049
    @ciararobb8049 Před 2 lety

    Great vids! ❤️ Thank you

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před 2 lety

      How’s med school coming along!

  • @kesiasantana9761
    @kesiasantana9761 Před 2 lety +5

    I love these videos about family medicine ❤️. Please share some tips on how to be prepared before enter in family medicine residency.
    Greetings from Brazil :)

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před 2 lety +1

      Yassss! I will keep that in mind

  • @florenceedee
    @florenceedee Před 2 lety

    So cute ❤️❤️

  • @indygeo4267
    @indygeo4267 Před rokem +1

    Family Medicine is the specialty I'd choose. That or Internal Medicine.

  • @chiravuris
    @chiravuris Před 2 lety +7

    I don't think PCPs will ever be looked down upon. People need referrals to go to specialists that PCPs give. Also, people can't take care of the "medical" stuff that PCPs do. Specially Healthcare maintenance.

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před 2 lety +1

      I consider myself the quarterback. Gotta know who to pass it to 😄

  • @abdulraufgarangan7437
    @abdulraufgarangan7437 Před 3 měsíci

    I’m seriously considering family medicine also. Here in the Philippines, Family Medicine is almost rising, but, there could still be discriminations as to some other people with how they perceive family medicine. But thanks to this video, i think im still gonna wanna include family medicine in my choices ❤

  • @AnkaraStylesandFashionWorld

    Did you do fellowship in preventive medicine?

  • @ReclusiveMountainMan
    @ReclusiveMountainMan Před 2 lety

    3:11 YES! LMFAO

  • @sofiasotres801
    @sofiasotres801 Před 2 lety +11

    Wise words Jenny prevention is the key, however healthy people are cheap vs sick people who are a big pharma money maker. Thank you for being an ethical doctor

  • @mampetema27
    @mampetema27 Před 10 měsíci

    your cons list is the same here in South Africa, WELL specialists here get paid the same generally but family medicine is generally looked down upon, i get asked so many times why family medicine. family medicine is fulfilling and its very important, its sad that primary health care(preventative) is not taken as seriously as other specialists

  • @naailtariq5930
    @naailtariq5930 Před 2 lety

    Hey Jenny, can you make a video about how you came to learn all those fantastic skills? I hope to be like the PCP you described yourself to be - doing lots of procedures! Making other specialist's lives easier too, not just the patients :) Or maybe just reply in the comments; is it about 'putting yourself out there'? Like asking to do a lot of stuff on rotations, etc...

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před 2 lety +1

      I learned majority of these skills in residency! We made it really clear the things we were interested in and luckily, our program was very receptive to accommodating our request.
      Talking to preceptors in the beginning and clearly stating that you’re interested in procedures will help you get more of them. And asking for frequent feed back.

    • @epistleofdude
      @epistleofdude Před rokem

      In addition, see Pfenninger and Fowler's Procedures for Primary Care

  • @patriotcine7521
    @patriotcine7521 Před rokem +2

    The biggest threat for family medicine is from mid levels encroachment

  • @chochee07
    @chochee07 Před 2 měsíci

    Where did you go for residency?

  • @change840
    @change840 Před 2 lety +2

    After family medicine can you do palliative care and work part time? Is palliative care very intense in terms of schedule/on calls.. thanks

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před 2 lety +1

      Yes! The palliative medicine physicians I worked with were in the hospital and need they also only worked part time. Time was split between the hospital and clinic. It was more shift work when in the hospital. No call.

  • @ImranAli-hj6nd
    @ImranAli-hj6nd Před rokem +3

    your kids are cute

  • @maidinh8280
    @maidinh8280 Před 2 lety +1

    Do you get compensated more than the base salary when you do procedures?

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před 2 lety +2

      Only if you’re on production. Doctors are usually on salary the first two years out of residency.

  • @anthonynguyen6636
    @anthonynguyen6636 Před rokem

    For residency of Family Medicine, how difficult is it? How many hours per week does a typical FM resident work? Also, do FM residents have to be on call? I'm a premed, and I'm just wondering. Thank you!

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před rokem

      All residency training is difficult. Inpatient rotations is 80 hrs/week. Inpatient is 40-60 hrs a week. The split is dependent on residency. Yes we were on call.

  • @valm.5243
    @valm.5243 Před rokem

    How do you get all that procedural training? How do you find a job that is mainly for procedures?

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před rokem +2

      Seek it out during residency! I chose specific elective rotations in sports medicine. You can also request the attendings to page you when they’re doing procedures to come assist.

  • @Badyal816
    @Badyal816 Před rokem

    Mam after MBBS is there is MS as option for becoming Family Medicine Doctor or there is only MD as option for becoming Family Medicine Doctor ? Please reply me

    • @tenacioustracy6796
      @tenacioustracy6796 Před rokem

      So, from the research I've done, the equivalent of the MS is doing residency to specialize in whatever field you desire. So, the MD is equivalent to your MBBS and then the residency is equivalent to the MS for specializing.

  • @isabelleornes8695
    @isabelleornes8695 Před rokem

    Do you think Family medicine is harder than specializing in a certain field because you have to know more of everything?

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před rokem +1

      I think every specialty has their own difficulty. But yes, Family medicine is just a different type of hard.

  • @cassidylee397
    @cassidylee397 Před rokem

    Miriam laugesen has a great body of work on why specialists get paid so much more than primary care, it's pretty fascinating and by that I mean infuriating

  • @DreaBe
    @DreaBe Před 8 měsíci

    I’m literally so confused on how to job shadow. I understand physicians are busy but why do they just blow me off?

  • @Samandcolbyfan_101
    @Samandcolbyfan_101 Před rokem

    Hey my name is Dorothy and it's been about 3 years since I've wanted to practice family medicine sense I was 9 I'm 12 now I'm going into 8th grade this August and after 10 grade my 2nd year of high school I wanna leave and head off to collage ill be 16 by then and be a family medicine phasiction

  • @epistleofdude
    @epistleofdude Před rokem

    Pros and cons of primary care (mainly referring to family medicine or internal medicine as a PCP or perhaps general pediatrics):
    Pros
    -Variety of patients
    -Variety of pathology
    -Outpatient procedures (if you like procedures but PCPs don’t need to do procedures if they don’t want to)
    -Ability to tailor your practice however you like in terms of work hours, patients you see, procedures, etc. (e.g. it’s not like anesthesia where you are in a symbiotic relationship with surgeons so you can’t always necessarily leave when you want to or take on the cases you want to or work without supervising CRNAs if your group requires it, etc.)
    -Continuity of care (though for some this could be a con if you prefer limited interactions with patients like say in emergency medicine)
    -True backbone of any health care system
    -True generalist (con if you like focusing deeply on one organ or system)
    -Respect (could be a pro or con depending on how you look at it, some specialists tend to denigrate PCPs especially those in academia, and academic physicians are what tends to influences most med students, hence no or little love from med students for primary care, at least until they get out into the real world and see how well respected a good PCP is among other specialists and especially among their own patients)
    -Jobs available virtually anywhere and ever in the US and in fact globally because many if not most other nations would accept a U.S. trained family physician aka GP in British parlance, you can work literally anywhere in the world, far more so than many other specialties
    -Tremendous flexibility, outpatient, inpatient (hospitalist at least a little bit outside major cities where they tend to prefer IM as hospitalists), telehealth, urgent care, sports medicine, rural medicine, emergency medicine (though only outside of major metros where they only hire EM), nursing homes/LTAC, etc.
    Cons
    -Poorly compensated in comparison to most other specialties (though in general a full time PCP - which is usually considered 4.5 days, Mon-Fri, no nights, no weekends, no holidays, limited calls and almost always calls on phone from home don’t have to go in - will make $200k-$300k per year (depending on a number of factors of course like location, payor mix of your patients e.g. Medicare to private insurance ratios, etc.)
    -Paperwork (e.g prior authorizations)

  • @marys6217
    @marys6217 Před 4 měsíci

    working day time hours for 2.5 days and earning 120k is quite good! def only physicians can achieve this. and probably only FM to achieve this flexibility in hours.

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před 3 měsíci

      Energy medicine full time is 13 shifts a month. Part time is less than that. Derm with the option to go into esthetics. Literally all other clinical speciality like rheumatology, outpatient internal medicine, endocrinology, etc all can work part time and will get paid more than FM.

  • @user-rz8vp1bd2y
    @user-rz8vp1bd2y Před 2 lety

    120K for 2.5days a week. I feel like that is really good!

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před 2 lety +4

      It is! If my school loans didn’t take away half my paycheck I’d feel even better! 😅

    • @AdamsDiomande
      @AdamsDiomande Před rokem

      How long will it take you to pay off your loans?

  • @nesli6604
    @nesli6604 Před 10 měsíci

    I don't know if anyone has told you this before, but you like like Meghan Markle!

    • @drjennale
      @drjennale  Před 10 měsíci

      I think one other person has said that before

  • @DrStoooopid
    @DrStoooopid Před rokem

    Mommy stole the best part