Why Doctors Are QUITTING MEDICINE

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 839

  • @saidchammas
    @saidchammas Před 2 lety +1262

    Doctors: leave medicine
    Hospitals: shortage of doctors
    Med schools: make it even harder to get in
    Students: screwed

    • @pimpnorris2097
      @pimpnorris2097 Před 2 lety +152

      Let’s make standardized test more expensive and harder to pass

    • @saidchammas
      @saidchammas Před 2 lety +126

      @@pimpnorris2097 and add more application fees. TERTIARY APPLICATIONS

    • @sabar4473
      @sabar4473 Před 2 lety +44

      Honestly I always found this so ridiculous. I'm guessing it's at least partly because the docs that stay want to keep their power through their scarcity so they keep the stupidly high standards. But the patients are the ones who suffer the consequences the most.

    • @saidchammas
      @saidchammas Před 2 lety +43

      @@sabar4473 i had to pay thousands in application fees to apply to 22 schools, only to get rejected by every single one and having to go to a caribbean school -.-

    • @destineetheecreator9504
      @destineetheecreator9504 Před 2 lety +29

      I honestly feel that if these programs and schools weren’t so hard to get into we would definitely have more of everything lol

  • @steff6146
    @steff6146 Před 2 lety +1351

    For those of us in medicine who don't have start-ups or very successful CZcams empires, leaving is easier said than done. That's also important to remember. The folks on CZcams don't represent the entire field, although it is definitely something to point out.

    • @michellegordon3319
      @michellegordon3319 Před 2 lety +66

      Exactly, I am sure a lot of physicians and students feel similarly but it also has to be realistic in that not everyone has something to fall back on or have the business “mindset” to be successful with CZcams or other ventures.

    • @CreavtiveCookie
      @CreavtiveCookie Před 2 lety +11

      Thank you for pointing this out. I second this

    • @andrewdavid4363
      @andrewdavid4363 Před 2 lety +15

      @IMPOSING MEDICINE dear sir/madam. I am myself an IMG. I shall be sharing my views only. Leaving or continuing medicine is one's own choice. I myself won't ask or check anyone for my choices. If I have to practice I would do so....if not I won't. It's all about personal choices and preferences. I myself quit practicing during pandemic and have recently resumed practice. I too hail from a very humble socioeconomic background and personally for me, medicine is not a profession for money making. If I were into making money, I would do what Kevin and some of my other professional colleagues have done....leave medicine and tend to my business(s). Stay blessed.

    • @sherylpowell7624
      @sherylpowell7624 Před 2 lety +15

      Having a portfolio career is another option. Some doctors reduce their hours ( part-time) and do other things i.e start a business, consultancy or something else completely unrelated to medicine. It makes a huge difference to their quality of life and wellbeing.

    • @thatwasinteresting3319
      @thatwasinteresting3319 Před 2 lety +25

      He never practiced medicine. He left during his residency

  • @PuertorroMed
    @PuertorroMed Před 2 lety +573

    As someone who left medical school, I totally relate to the identity subject Kevin brought to the table. There is a life outside of medicine but getting rid of this identity that was built for years takes a tremendous work. If you are a medical student or a resident physician looking to leave medicine consider using therapy for your transition. It will help to deal with letting go of this identity. You are worthy regardless if you become a physician or not. There is light on the other side.

    • @mooninmycup6954
      @mooninmycup6954 Před 2 lety +13

      this is a lovely message.

    • @uritmom8777
      @uritmom8777 Před 2 lety +9

      This was needed!

    • @jonathanzav
      @jonathanzav Před 2 lety +12

      Yeah I’m kind of stuck doing medicine not really knowing my true passion. I hope my struggles pay off.

    • @zionreign5074
      @zionreign5074 Před 2 lety +6

      @@jonathanzav as we grow things tend to become more clear as the overall picture finds focus you’ll be able to see I more clearly. I hope this metaphorical expression makes sense. If not I’m sorry 🤦🏾‍♂️ but all in all things will make sense in time. I promise. Just stay open to possibility and pay attention to how you feel mentally and emotionally. Allow PEACE within yourself to be your guide on this life’s journey. Our intuition speaks so clearly to us all. It’s just a matter of being still in some moments and listening. Wishing you the much success and the absolute best this life has to offer my Friend 🙏🏾.

    • @jonathanzav
      @jonathanzav Před 2 lety +1

      @@zionreign5074 thank you. I wish you be best likewise 👍

  • @khalilahd.
    @khalilahd. Před 2 lety +382

    As a pre medical student this has been something that definitely worries me. I really want to pursue this career but seeing how stressed and overworked they’ve become in the last few years has been worrying me. I appreciate you taking the time to talk about this 🙏🏽

    • @WatchClock99
      @WatchClock99 Před 2 lety +104

      It's scary when the people that inspired you make a career change..

    • @primaveras1erra
      @primaveras1erra Před 2 lety +30

      I'm studying for medical school entrance exams too, and on one hand I was also worried about doctors leaving their jobs. On the other hand, it makes me more comfortable knowing that there's the flexibility of a career change.
      If there are a lot of doctors leaving, that should encourage hospitals to be more intentional about keeping us around. Doctors leaving just means more room for us up and coming students...

    • @steff6146
      @steff6146 Před 2 lety +44

      Hi! I'm a final-year medical student, and I think something you have to take into account is that many of these folks leaving medicine are creators. A "medical CZcamsr" will have a lot of different priorities than the rest of us, they HAVE another career to turn to that will make them the same amount or even more money. For the rest of us with thousands of dollars in debt, we're not dropping out that quicky. Of course, the more "regular" med students/residents/physicians are also burnt out and considering changing careers. However, what I see more frequently is for people to switch specialities. For example, I know some surgical residents that have switched into family medicine so they can have a more stable 9-5. All I'm trying to say is, I wouldn't let this discourage you but it is important to think about. Medicine was already stressful, toxic, painful, and overwhelming BEFORE the pandemic. Now everything is more intense. But do know that there are many doctors still trucking along. Just remember to put everything into perspective.
      That said, I don't regret my decision, but it hasn't been easy - even as a lowly medical student. If you like any fulfilling career even slightly more than medicine, DO THAT INSTEAD. Hahahahah

    • @primaveras1erra
      @primaveras1erra Před 2 lety +6

      @@steff6146 This comment resonated with me

    • @shantnubhanwala5972
      @shantnubhanwala5972 Před 2 lety +12

      Don't pursue it , it's not worth it . Saying from experience , how govt and companies exploit doctors and medical staff. I am thinking about administration now

  • @tim_ernest
    @tim_ernest Před 2 lety +386

    Definitely interested in seeing what options MDs and DOs have post-graduation outside of patient care / medicine. My current understanding:
    -Biotechnology start-ups
    -Medical Administration
    -Policy Work or Philanthropy efforts
    -Medical sales (tho potentially dubious)
    -Teaching
    Could you address the percentages of people go into each, changes in salary expectations leaving medicine, differences between options DO and MD (if any), and maybe the different opportunities available if someone went straight after medical school compared to completing a residency first? A few of my mentors left after a few years of practice post-residency and recommend at least getting to that stage before shifting to other opportunities but I would love your thoughts to minimize personal bias ("I wouldn't change a thing" since no one really regrets anything if they learn).
    Thank you always providing such high-tier content! Been on a tea binge since that last video and thoroughly enjoy the health and energy benefits. Keep up the great work bro!

    • @markm919100
      @markm919100 Před 2 lety +12

      Came here to second this, would love a video about all the possible things you could do with an MD/DO degree, even things that don't require it but could benefit from it like a type of business

    • @katelyng161
      @katelyng161 Před 2 lety +5

      Thirding this! Would love a video like this!

    • @joha914
      @joha914 Před 2 lety +11

      Fourthing this ! I left residency 4 months ago and now I'm jobless and broke

    • @AR-kp2yz
      @AR-kp2yz Před 2 lety +4

      interested in this as well

    • @PuertorroMed
      @PuertorroMed Před 2 lety +4

      I left med school myself, would love to see this

  • @neol2535
    @neol2535 Před 2 lety +188

    I'm a medical student in South Africa, and I can tell you that a lot of my classmates and junior(/student) doctors I know, including myself, are planning to leave medicine much "sooner than expected". And as you said main reason is Burn-Out. Our public healthcare system is severely burdened and under resourced and working as a doctor there is extremely difficult and exhausting (we're literally constantly cycling through periods of burn-out, anxiety and depression...for the sake of the publics' health🥴). And because of this a lot of us just fall-out-of-love with medicine and would simply rather do something else that fuels our other passions and doesn't drain us on a daily.🤷‍♀

    • @DrMocktopus1
      @DrMocktopus1 Před 2 lety +8

      Ayy I was doing Med at Wits but then I switched to a Biomedical academic route 'cause I think academia would be more fulfilling for me

    • @AGirlCalledNicole
      @AGirlCalledNicole Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah the struggle is real. Same here!

    • @lopj456
      @lopj456 Před 2 lety +1

      Bro you're a Studen wtf you talking about hahaha

    • @neol2535
      @neol2535 Před 2 lety +11

      @@lopj456 your comment is giving “I’m trolling” energy…hahaha.✨

    • @dawnshangase156
      @dawnshangase156 Před 2 lety +6

      I may not be a med student but I have lots of friends studying medicine in their 5th and final years at UKZN also some are practicing. The burnout, depression and suicide rate is real and concerning. 💔

  • @stellalawrence4580
    @stellalawrence4580 Před 2 lety +127

    If anyone is pre-med, I highly recommend you reconsider. I worked so, so hard to get in and it's just a life of misery and people convincing themselves it's worth it. Go into tech, social work, pursue something else. Med school is hell and it only gets worse

    • @dentaladdict98
      @dentaladdict98 Před 2 lety +6

      I am in dental school and feeling the same way….

    • @flanagamer
      @flanagamer Před 2 lety +6

      But the money bro 🤷🏻‍♂️🤑💰

    • @JT-tx2ns
      @JT-tx2ns Před 2 lety +1

      thank you for this honesty

    • @mertz313
      @mertz313 Před 2 lety +34

      @@flanagamer you can make a LOT of money in tech lol

    • @edhcb9359
      @edhcb9359 Před 2 lety +22

      LOL! Get a masters in social work and see where it gets you. Hope you like minimum wage! 😂

  • @skessel1237
    @skessel1237 Před 2 lety +54

    I’m a doc who left after intern year during the pandemic and found a career in management consulting happy to contribute to the vid in alternative career paths: docs can go into consulting, banking, digital health, pharma and more!

  • @angelicamariaescobar885
    @angelicamariaescobar885 Před 2 lety +120

    YES YES PLEASE, MAKE A VIDEO WITH CAREER OPTIONS FOR PEOPLE LEAVING MEDICINE! I am currently about to start my fourth year of medical school, and the closer I get to the finish line the more I doubt whether this path was for me. Any concrete advice on what else to do without throwing away a whole medical education would be fantastic.

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon Před 2 lety +4

      Medical school is just the beginning and certainly not "the finish line". If you have doubts now, do yourself a big favor and resolve them promptly.

    • @tylerxi3828
      @tylerxi3828 Před 2 lety +3

      Currently a fourth year, didn’t match ortho soapd into EM. Medicine is abusive and nepotistic. Find something you can live with, start chunking away at your debt, get debt free, then find a new venture. Doctors are substantially more successful when transplanted into most if not all other industries. We learn how to work hard, not complain, think clearly in critical situations, communicate, lead teams. Clearly, a physician would be an excellent hire. Just thoughts.

    • @alphaaka3082
      @alphaaka3082 Před rokem +1

      @@purpleheadedmonster8735 Good luck bro

    • @karshinimkumar3821
      @karshinimkumar3821 Před 5 měsíci

      True, I just now finished my final year MBBS in India. Each day I try to convince myself every day to stay but its very difficult to breathe and I so badly wanted to change my profession where I can change people's lives and also not get drained emotionally.

  • @anniezafar3777
    @anniezafar3777 Před 2 lety +36

    Being someone who left her Anesthesiology residency forever, i really needed that video. Thank you for explaining why medical profession is not a piece of cake. I left it because of immense pressure, mental torture and responsibility of someone's life on my head. Couldn't handle it all. I will not give up and do something better than this, as a source of living.

    • @hiba787
      @hiba787 Před rokem +1

      I commend you Annie, I am at a similar phase, Could you tell me what you decided to do?

    • @100subsnovideos9
      @100subsnovideos9 Před rokem

      I would also like to know what you ended up pursuing after leaving medicine

    • @whatsnew7139
      @whatsnew7139 Před rokem +1

      What did you do instead? 😊

    • @modernkhajiit
      @modernkhajiit Před 4 měsíci

      Hi, I am leaving Anesthesiology right now. I still have few days to stop the machine but every day I wake up without going to this work, I don't want to look back. I loved my job to the point I changed places twice, and once I changed the city only to learn and do more and more. Finally PTSD after covid-19 killed my mind. I can't be a doctor anymore and I won't. And nobody seemed to appreciate my work anyway. There was only money as the the reason keeping me there. Enough, I want to have some life and I don't care about others anymore. Nobody even asked me how am I feeling at 3 a.m. bending over unconcious man vomiting with blood. They demanded that I know everything, but few were willing to teach me through all those years. Now when I ask anyone about their job, they know nothing and get money anyway. 😂 I don't care. I'm also open for opinions on another jobs.

    • @bobsmith6742
      @bobsmith6742 Před 3 měsíci

      That profession is ebing decimated by the use of nurse anesthesists. There can be many of them working under one anesthesiologist.

  • @FacundoMD
    @FacundoMD Před 2 lety +213

    ER doctor here !!!!! You are an amazing entrepreneur you made the choices that made you happy (simple). I love going to work every single day, and I am thankful that I get to do so. I may be biased because in my case becoming a physician was not a choice that was readily available or close to me. I was an immigrant McDonalds worker and I achieve my goal of becoming a physician. I enjoy the brain challenge of medicine and helping others when they are most vulnerable. Money is not a reason why I did it. Even if you tell me I can run a tech company right now and make 2 million a year I will NOT, I will be miserable. Are there stressful days ? YES Are there very nasty and difficult patients? YES Will you sacrifice your peak year for hard work? YES BUT if it is what you like and enjoy with great compensation then.... DO IT !!!!!!! Sorry for my long opinion. Wish you all the best !!!! In case you don't know I do CZcams as well but on the side as a hobby ;) !

    • @appollo1826
      @appollo1826 Před 2 lety +8

      Thank you for your opinion. I want to be a Doctor for similar reasons.

    • @FacundoMD
      @FacundoMD Před 2 lety +8

      @K Thank you for your kind words. And honestly I do have patients tell me I am kind etc. SO it is worth it. Last month I was in ICU and one of the patient that was recently extubated told he he thought I was a good doctor and that made my whole week it was great ! Stay safe

    • @FacundoMD
      @FacundoMD Před 2 lety +5

      @@appollo1826 Nice !!! Keep it up, like I said is not easy, is hard but worth it. Your vocation will mean a lot, you will get pay well, you will always have a job, etc. Cant go wrong if you like it.

    • @jobis34
      @jobis34 Před 2 lety +1

      @@FacundoMD did you always like medicine this much? Did you ever doubt this passion?
      Did your love/passion for being a doctor grow throughout school and residency? Or did it start out at the ceiling and slowly get lower (or stay the same)?

    • @FacundoMD
      @FacundoMD Před 2 lety +2

      @K Yay !!!

  • @derrickrnc
    @derrickrnc Před 2 lety +17

    I was a General Surgeon for 10 years. Cracked the exams again and now in am pursuing Radiology. It's a lifestyle modification for me.

  • @DoctorAzmain
    @DoctorAzmain Před 2 lety +306

    A lot of us enter medicine because we want to help people. But soon we realize there are ways to help others and ourselves beyond medicine - without burning ourselves out! Less good reasons to enter medicine are because it “pays well” and it’s “prestigious”, without realizing the hard realities! The high loans, the responsibility of looking after people’s lives… It’s a privilege, don’t get me wrong! But a reason I started my CZcams channel is because I realized I can benefit so many more people through education than just my patients!

    • @akhileshakhil4390
      @akhileshakhil4390 Před 2 lety +1

      Hello Dr. Azmin, do you have a CZcams channel on presenting the realities of medical field?.. If yes could you also provide details about which country are you practicing in and also at what stage you're at.
      Thank you

    • @DoctorAzmain
      @DoctorAzmain Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@akhileshakhil4390 Hi Akhilesh! I do indeed - it's the channel I'm commenting from (Doctor Azmain). I'm a junior doctor in the UK - 2 years since I graduated from medical school. I post videos about interesting medical conditions, life as a doctor, TV show reactions etc. Hope that helps! :)

    • @DoctorAzmain
      @DoctorAzmain Před 2 lety +1

      @IMPOSING MEDICINE that's the way it should be! Once upon a time, university in the UK was free... That said, I think doctors everywhere should diversify their skills (e.g. education, coding, design, leadership) - there's more to life than medicine, and the more you learn, the better a doctor you'll be!

    • @chinchillamdgamer
      @chinchillamdgamer Před 2 lety

      I'm sorry but if you need time to realize an architect doesn't help people, or an engineer, or an artist who makes music and cheers your day up. Also, I'm quite concerned the first thing you say is "the high loans"... You know that isn't an issue in my country and it's something that clearly shows where your priorities are. Almost US college students have loans. Popularizing this topic in such a way is really awful. Instead of focusing on how the situation could be improved, not just in the US. Don't take me wrong, hey I slept on the floor more than once during the clerkships, it's nice that current students don't have to.

    • @chinchillamdgamer
      @chinchillamdgamer Před 2 lety

      @@akhileshakhil4390 the reality is, that no matter how hard it is, how unpaid, and how physical and mentally exhausting it is... There is nothing else (at least in Mexico where PA's or RNs just don't exist) that can replace or even be close to doing what you love. Even if it includes smelling vomit, feces and blood and being underpaid. My mum kept asking me why I won't just go into another field coz I haven't made it into my specialty of choice. I asked her mum, there's nothing like the OR, she said other stuff pays as much or more, i told her, I'm not talking about money, it's doing that, there's no way I could be back in there holding a scalpel again. Just none.
      THAT is the reality.
      Every single profession and career, even a greedy CEO helps people in one way as a "side effect".

  • @Joshua.2303
    @Joshua.2303 Před 2 lety +159

    I would definitely appreciate a discussion of alternate careers for doctors. I’m pursuing medicine but have always felt constrained by the path, so I’d love to hear your view of where else a medical degree can take you

    • @amplemedicallectures
      @amplemedicallectures Před 2 lety +3

      Subscribe this channel for Latest Medical Lectures.

    • @elitenemysis6633
      @elitenemysis6633 Před 2 lety +7

      @@amplemedicallectures no

    • @andrewdavid4363
      @andrewdavid4363 Před 2 lety

      Hello Josh. Are you in medical school? Or are you preparing to take licensure exam for residency?

    • @pesimsmd
      @pesimsmd Před 2 lety +1

      I too am interested in alternative careers

    • @tama3442
      @tama3442 Před 2 lety

      Hi, I'm spreading the Gospel around in much love ❤️
      Have faith in JESUS CHRIST as LORD and SAVIOR for HE SAVES from hell❗️
      *What is the Gospel?*
      The true gospel is the good news that God saves sinners. Man is by nature sinful and separated from God with no hope of remedying that situation. But God, by His power, provided the means of man’s redemption in the death, burial, and resurrection of the Savior, Jesus Christ.
      Ephesians 2:8-9
      For it is by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of GOD, not a result of works, so that no one may boast.
      Romans 10:9
      9 because, if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.
      JESUS CHRIST can come anytime!
      Just Believe ❤️ Love you and GOD BLESS

  • @charlesahweyevu
    @charlesahweyevu Před 2 lety +32

    This is exactly why I stopped pursuing medicine. When I was in my master's program trying to be more competitive for med school. I began to see the true work, money and time cost needed for medicine. The nail that really stuck it for me was when I realized I was working hard now JUST to keep on working hard later in life. I don't want to keep working my ass off for the rest of my working life.
    I had to have a heart to heart with myself and the truth is I want to work hard now so that I can live easy later on in adulthood and that's when I realized medicine wasn't the fit for my lifestyle. Aslo the identity thing was very cringe to me seeing students developed their entire personality around being a med student or doctor. Felt very clout chasy.

    • @chi-amaka
      @chi-amaka Před 2 lety +2

      This is so me right now. I even declined on on masters because I am like hmm I’m basically going to pay 40k for a masters just to get into med school only because of my mcat score was the only flaw on my app. You can see how much of a financial scam everything is . The unknown is scary and realizing I probably don’t want to be a doctor anymore after thinking I wasn’t to be one since I was little is scary, sad, and life changing

    • @chi-amaka
      @chi-amaka Před 2 lety

      Wanted*

    • @chi-amaka
      @chi-amaka Před 2 lety +1

      The unknown is super frustrating to be in because now you have to figure out what you want to do

    • @charlesahweyevu
      @charlesahweyevu Před 2 lety +4

      @@chi-amaka It is. There are many alternatives for science majors. You can be a clinical lab scientist, a histotechnologist, a nuclear medicine technologist etc. All these are allied health occupations that require schooling but if you already have a bachelor's in biology or some equivalent. You could skip the prerequisite classes. They don't cost nearly as much as med school. There's also PA school too if u still want that direct patient interaction.
      Personally I became a clinical lab scientist. It costs me 5k. It was a 2 year program. I only had to do a year. I make about 70-85k a year. There are ways to earn even more. I didn't want to throw away all the science I've worked hard to learn over the years but I didn't want to go med school or deal with patients directly on a daily basis.

    • @chi-amaka
      @chi-amaka Před 2 lety

      @Charles Ahweyevu I just followed you on ig btw! Love connecting with people who went through or are going through the same thing as me. I am thinking of PA school though.

  • @primaveras1erra
    @primaveras1erra Před 2 lety +38

    Please go over the various career options after leaving medicine. I hear about people leaving all the time and I'm left wondering - to do what, with who, where, and for how long???

  • @isabellafabrizio4300
    @isabellafabrizio4300 Před 2 lety +71

    Would love to see a video on alternative career paths for MDs! Currently on a year off from med school trying to decide whether I should drop out now and choose an alternate career, or stick it out and complete the degree. I do not dream of clinical practice - in fact, I dream of leaving it... and I haven't even started it yet! The idea of using my medical degree in a unique entrepreneurial way outside of clinical practice appeals to me. But I am unsure of how to exactly go about doing that, or if it's even worth it to continue to pursue a medical degree with that goal in mind. I feel like I've found my people in this comment section!

    • @HealthyHairJourney
      @HealthyHairJourney Před 2 lety +4

      Please follow your heart and intuition now while you are still younger. Life is to short to be Miserable.

    • @andrewdavid4363
      @andrewdavid4363 Před 2 lety +2

      Hi Isabella. It's totally your call. A friendly advice is to complete your MD. I mean it's a prestigious degree according to my opinion. With a degree in your hand you will have ample opportunities to grab at various horizons even entrepreneurship.

    • @brittgayle467
      @brittgayle467 Před 2 lety +2

      @@andrewdavid4363 most MD programs are incredibly expensive. Other useful careers exist.

    • @tama3442
      @tama3442 Před 2 lety

      Hi, I'm spreading the Gospel around in much love ❤️
      Have faith in JESUS CHRIST as LORD and SAVIOR for HE SAVES from hell❗️
      *What is the Gospel?*
      The true gospel is the good news that God saves sinners. Man is by nature sinful and separated from God with no hope of remedying that situation. But God, by His power, provided the means of man’s redemption in the death, burial, and resurrection of the Savior, Jesus Christ.
      Ephesians 2:8-9
      For it is by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of GOD, not a result of works, so that no one may boast.
      Romans 10:9
      9 because, if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.
      JESUS CHRIST can come anytime!
      Just Believe ❤️ Love you and GOD BLESS

    • @valenciodiaz2644
      @valenciodiaz2644 Před 2 lety

      @@brittgayle467 yeah and most people are truly lucky while im stuck with med school (haven't been in one but my dad wanted it not me) which I wanted to do in the past but these days I wanted to be an IT student due to my love for computers and coding (I already graduated from a premed though)....

  • @matthewcormier1753
    @matthewcormier1753 Před 2 lety +13

    I appreciate your emphasis on helping pre-med and medical students consider what the actual doctor experience is. Very few people make an effort to do that. Thank you Doctor.

  • @kana18910
    @kana18910 Před 2 lety +12

    After getting the MD, planned of quitting, but still gave it a chance, so I practiced for a year then realized it wasn't really the field for me. So I left and currently getting my Masters in informatics. No regrets.

    • @waverider6133
      @waverider6133 Před 2 lety

      Lol I’m sorry. That’s just really so funny to me. Good luck

  • @squirreleyy
    @squirreleyy Před 2 lety +11

    Wish a video like this was available when I was in highschool. Overhyped medicine way too much in my head, and being extra competitive person made me lost sight of what I actually wanted. Hope to leave this career before it consumes every aspect of my life.

    • @Neyjustin
      @Neyjustin Před rokem

      I waa aa competitive too, I would be confident but am really drained. I am currently a year and thinking to differ or change course

  • @drin9401
    @drin9401 Před 2 lety +14

    Please do make a video of what careers physicians exit to! Not just physicians, but everyone on the path. I think it would be very useful given the trends.

  • @pimpnorris2097
    @pimpnorris2097 Před 2 lety +44

    I’m a Covid resident, it’s all I’ve ever known. I lost family and almost lost my mom to the virus. I’ve risked my life taking on this virus. I know I’m suffering from ptsd and depression from this and my residency supports us 100%, so I can only imagine the ones that don’t . It’s so fucked up… I’ve looked up my leave policy so many times it’s crazy.

    • @jemimajanvier4706
      @jemimajanvier4706 Před 2 lety +1

      I am so sorry for your losses, I hope that the sun will shine on you soon

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon Před 2 lety +1

      During the early part of the pandemic when NYC hospitals were being crushed, I volunteered to return from retirement to help. I'm certified by 3 boards and have a NY license. At least I could treat pneumonia, run ventilators, intubate pts. and do tracheostomies all day. The state thanked me but thought, for the moment, that they had enough M.D.s and that the risk to me might be too high. I was willing to accept it but they were technically correct.

    • @bomcstoots1
      @bomcstoots1 Před 2 lety +2

      Welcome to the PTSD club. I've had it since I was 7. What happens when society doesn't give a shit about you and the state raises you. You're accustomed to normal. I've never had normal. Be lucky you had normal. Now if I can find a doctor to actually do their job probably that would be fantastic. People don't stop getting cancer you know. So while doctors are doing bare minimum, they also rob people who have a year left to live, out of that little time left to do what you will have 50 years to do. I know I won't last much longer. It's like having a 308 in your brain, you can feel it moving around, pressing against nerves. Specially the trigeminal nerve, that one is a real bitch. I'd do anything to make it stop. That's why do many eat a bullet when trigeminal nerve pain comes day after day for hours at a time.

    • @norah3036
      @norah3036 Před 2 lety

      You are lucky, at least you managed to save your mother

    • @stormybeach5211
      @stormybeach5211 Před rokem

      @@bomcstoots1 your life breaks my heart. I have several autoimmune diseases that’s incurable so I can relate. My PC Dr just resigned. He was the first Dr to really do his best to help treat me. I’m devastated and now looking through the jungle to find a new PC Dr. I wish you the best. There’s always someone in worse shape than me is what I tell myself.

  • @minareddy9895
    @minareddy9895 Před 2 lety +9

    The most frustrating thing is the fact that the health care system has a deficit of doctors, yet they won’t allow more applicants to join Med schools and they don’t provide the tools needed to stay in medicine long term. It’s like an exhaustive process where you’re burnt out physically ,mentally, and financially with no light at the end of the tunnel.

  • @rch12S
    @rch12S Před 2 lety +27

    I was not able to enter residency and found my way up to clinical research and now I’m a drug safety manager making decent money. There’s always something new you can focus

    • @khadijanoor1781
      @khadijanoor1781 Před rokem

      Can you plz guide me how to become a drug safety manager after doing mbbs

  • @christiancasteel5962
    @christiancasteel5962 Před 2 lety +39

    Another reality that I don’t see cited often is the fact that over the years med school admissions has skewed more and more towards people from upper class backgrounds (see aamc data). A non trivial amount of students are from Doctor families and many don’t even want to be in medicine in the first place but are pressure or flat out forced by their families. I saw many classmates like that who were burned out from day one.

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon Před 2 lety +5

      Admissions committees are not doing their jobs if they fail to weed out applicants like that.

  • @ytpremium6294
    @ytpremium6294 Před 2 lety +3

    Same here. I hope people will start rewarding people working in healthcare more. Working in the hospital is like a battlefield. it is emotionally, physically, and mentally exhausting.

  • @sricharanpusala2469
    @sricharanpusala2469 Před 2 lety +9

    Would love to see a video on Healthcare consulting right after completing medical school, with or without a residency!

  • @PhoenixBlade538
    @PhoenixBlade538 Před 2 lety +25

    I'd be curious to hear what kind of systemic changes need to happen so that doctors are less likely to feel burnt out! Not sure if that'd be better vid for here or your med school insiders channel though!

    • @ItWillRainXO
      @ItWillRainXO Před 2 lety +10

      Better work conditions could be made drastically by increasing the number of residency positions. More people to share the work equals better work life balance for each individual person. There’s a bill in congress right now called the Resident Physician Shortage Reduction Act and everyone should call their congressperson to advocate for this!!

    • @CreavtiveCookie
      @CreavtiveCookie Před 2 lety +5

      It's simple. We want to feel that someone cares about us

  • @LaurenMichelleMD
    @LaurenMichelleMD Před 2 lety +17

    I’m a med student getting my MBA as well! Would love to see a video on healthcare-tangential careers outside of direct patient care. I don’t think it’s always leaving medicine, but maybe just leaving patient care

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon Před 2 lety

      Absolutely correct. Congratulations on taking a broader view of the profession.

    • @benditonafilo1295
      @benditonafilo1295 Před rokem

      Lauren, u're absolutely right. Many people choose Medicina just for the cash that career provides. But they can't imagine the challenges that career gives.

  • @katemichelle
    @katemichelle Před 2 lety +7

    One thing I don’t hear a lot of people talk about, is that medical schools recruit well-rounded students (volunteering, interesting extracurriculares, etc.) but then once you get in med school/residency/first years out of residency, you don’t have time to be well-rounded. You will have to pick and choose between the things you have already invested time in and like to do so that you have enough time to work/study. I personally feel this largely contributes to burnout and why people end up feeling medicine is their whole life

  • @WatchClock99
    @WatchClock99 Před 2 lety +26

    All of those youtube doctors probably make as much money or more with youtube, so the incentive to leave is higher than for doctors who don't have those options.

    • @bobsmith6742
      @bobsmith6742 Před 3 měsíci

      And how do you know it? For me, the more enlightening statistics are that when many physicians actually calculate their hourly take home pay rate, it is often not that great. Plumbers in many parts of the country are doing better

  • @matthewherren
    @matthewherren Před 2 lety +1

    As a Sr Medical/Surgical Sales Executive, who’s started their own business, very well done and needed video.

  • @muathdarion8521
    @muathdarion8521 Před 2 lety +105

    you guys got me into med school and now your leaving , damn i feel like I've been fooled 😂😂

  • @anuraggoyal8388
    @anuraggoyal8388 Před 2 lety +4

    Yeah, we definitely need a video on career options outside medicine after graduating from med school.

  • @ngoctuyet726
    @ngoctuyet726 Před 2 lety +8

    Yes! Would love to learn about more options outside of medicine after medical school.

  • @josechacon6015
    @josechacon6015 Před 2 lety +106

    As a medical student, my goal is not only practice medicine but spend time overseas in Global Health as a mission doctor. Global Medicine is my top reason to enter medicine as well witnessing couple countries where there is a lack in essential necessities. I know many doctors have done this and despite the stress and difficulty, they are more happier and forfiled than any doctor in regular pratice. I pray that those interested in medicine I pray that all will enter and be satisfied in what they do knowing that all is possible to chase the dream.

    • @eh1095
      @eh1095 Před 2 lety +6

      I want to do something similar, is there a certain path or plan you have to achieve this goal?

    • @bettysmith4527
      @bettysmith4527 Před 2 lety +1

      The problem is paying the student loans doing this, is that possible?

    • @josechacon6015
      @josechacon6015 Před 2 lety +2

      @@eh1095 Hi there, what I did was get into connection with some medical mission organizations. There many, both religious and non alike, and let them know you are interested in medical missions and they will give you the info for doing that and even allow you to do short term( a week or 2) or long term( at least a month or so).
      The other option is form you own and have a mission mentor that can guide you the way. Lots of work but surely worth it.
      Hope this helped🙏🙌

    • @josechacon6015
      @josechacon6015 Před 2 lety +3

      @@bettysmith4527 hi there, it’s very possible. Although it might be a slow process to do that. What I would recommend is maybe a short term( a week or 2) to start while making payments. As soon you are able to make payments better then you can increase your time. As mention it will be a slower process but little by little or can be possible. Hope this helps🙏🙌

    • @natew6203
      @natew6203 Před 2 lety

      @@josechacon6015 what specialty do you think you'll do?

  • @mariogaffuri535
    @mariogaffuri535 Před 2 lety +4

    Very helpful and reassuring as a medstudent. It's like telling me that the cake I'm working so hard to buy It's already rotten

  • @mandycreeksquad1722
    @mandycreeksquad1722 Před 2 lety +2

    I have been a nurse for 15 years, and I left it this year. I am happier now and have no desire to ever go back.

  • @robpgh159
    @robpgh159 Před 2 lety +10

    Kev is very well read regarding pattern recognition 👍🏻 , great book called “The Black Swan Effect”
    I finished pre med and had my burnout during the mcat prep. Never felt happier since leaving the torture path

  • @ayz123_87
    @ayz123_87 Před 8 měsíci +1

    im a hospital pharmacist. Paid off 200k in student loans in 6 years. Our MD's are now now more concerned with social media?

  • @MrSwitzerland88
    @MrSwitzerland88 Před 2 lety +18

    Hey Kevin,
    I'd absolutely love to hear about alternative options soon! As someone who was once pre-med and took the MCAT, i completely felt burnt out and am thinking of applying to PA school instead. I'm currently getting my masters in public health and am seriously rethinking about not going into medicine but maybe more towards the biomedical/biotech side.
    I absolutely loved this video and I hope you make another video very soon to speak about different avenues and career paths.
    Thank you!

  • @trzmdpath1981
    @trzmdpath1981 Před 2 lety +12

    Best wishes to all of my fellow physicians, residents, fellows and medical students. I practiced for thirty years in anatomic and clinical pathology with the last twenty-one years as a medical director of a hospital laboratory. Borrowing more than $200K is absolutely not worth it. The hospital bureaucrats, state and federal government bureaucrats and the avaricious sleazy tort lawyers absolutely do not care about any of us and absolutely enjoy abusing us for their own enjoyment. The presiding bureaucrats and board members at my last hospital would do an annual board retreat to some exotic location every year where they would spend lavishly on themselves. The enactment of federal Obamacare in the USA has lead all medical workers including all physicians, surgeons, obstetricians, pediatricians, radiologists, anesthesiologists and pathologists being treated as completely expendable really no better than housekeepers in the eyes of the hospital bureaucrats and board members. The fact that most acute care hospitals in the USA are not-for-profit makes no difference. Presiding hospital bureaucrats love their lavish salaries and bonuses!

    • @tama3442
      @tama3442 Před 2 lety

      Hi, I'm spreading the Gospel around in much love ❤️
      Have faith in JESUS CHRIST as LORD and SAVIOR for HE SAVES from hell❗️
      *What is the Gospel?*
      The true gospel is the good news that God saves sinners. Man is by nature sinful and separated from God with no hope of remedying that situation. But God, by His power, provided the means of man’s redemption in the death, burial, and resurrection of the Savior, Jesus Christ.
      Ephesians 2:8-9
      For it is by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of GOD, not a result of works, so that no one may boast.
      Romans 10:9
      9 because, if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.
      JESUS CHRIST can come anytime!
      Just Believe ❤️ Love you and GOD BLESS

    • @davidtrace3311
      @davidtrace3311 Před rokem +1

      When you say “hospital bureaucrats,” who exactly are you referring to?

  • @ThinThinHan85
    @ThinThinHan85 Před 2 lety +6

    It was my hardest decision that I’ve ever made to leave medicine/ clinical job after I have finished my Australian Medical Exam, got a job and start settling back in 2013. Then I joined my family business ( a very different industry). Nearly 10 years now and when I ask myself now that “Do I regret it”? Actually I don’t regret it at all :) I still love to update clinical knowledge & skills and sharing my clinical knowledge to others though. But I would never go back to the life of a burnt out doctor. Really respect to all clinicians cuz most of them don’t even have time to take care of themselves and their family :)

  • @brianyi4436
    @brianyi4436 Před 2 lety +33

    would love to see videos on careers after leaving medicine!

  • @bis6796
    @bis6796 Před 2 lety +11

    I also graduated and left medicine and I’m not gonna lie a lot of the points in this video really hit home for me.
    I’d like to know what are some alternative career choices for doctors.

  • @kobsssTV91
    @kobsssTV91 Před 2 lety +5

    Yes please would love to see a video on the career options after deciding to leave medicine

  • @khoiruladinuralfisyahri2293

    wow watching your video is like when I was in pre-med, and asking for advice to my senior about things and how much it brings comfort from the advice, thanks a lot

  • @zariyahcampos3565
    @zariyahcampos3565 Před 2 lety +5

    Lol this is so relatable. I love this video! I was forced into medical field but I'm thankful that I quitted early so I won't waste more money. Now I am in my most preferable field.

  • @johnchristian9162
    @johnchristian9162 Před rokem +2

    As a nurse for almost 30 years, I find stories like this fascinating. I respect this experience, but can't identify with it myself. As an alternate experience, there will still always be those that show up to care for the sick and injured....because it must be done.

  • @sirfortesque8757
    @sirfortesque8757 Před 2 lety +3

    I'm so happy you found happiness and fulfillment in your life but Im sorry you had to leave "practice" to do so. As a Nurse for 37 years i feel blessed that I have never been happier or more at peace than i feel right now. I was extremely lucky in that i started working @MSK in NYC in 1985 and with the HIV crisis they needed volunteers to go out to peoples homes and i soon became a home infusion nurse and since 1990 thats what i have done full time(never went back to a hospital). The home environment is so completely different, not only in the setting but in the quality and its more holistic with a much better continuity of care. I have had some patients for over 20 years and i started seeing them when they were kids and i still see them now that they are married with kids of their own. I do see in social media many of my colleagues saying they are leaving medicine and it saddens me deeply. Asking me to leave Nursing would be like asking me to stop breathing. I have been married the last 21 years and have 2 teens. Yes., the job can be overwhelming at times but the rewards are 10 fold. I have made sacrifices along the way but thats how we live life when we are called to serve. I think it's because i am perhaps older but i never expected to have more "me time" and have never felt "burnt out". Nursing is not my job, its my vocation, my calling, my purpose and i hope that this doesnt sound pious or judgmental bc i do not intend it to be. There are many ways to care for and help others and i hope everybody can find their own niche to do so. But to me there is something magical and spiritual about hands on connections while caring for others that can never be matched in any other way. I am blessed in so many ways and BTW....the $ has always been another blessing. The freedom of making my own schedule has allowed me time for family/friends even though it is not as much as i might have hooped for. I pray all of you find a way to keep up your spirits and feel appreciated both with patient appreciation and financially. Im happy that you can touch others thru your social media to possibly prevent our colleagues from leaving medicine altogether and just find a different specialty or a different mode of caring for others. Great videos!!

  • @tmahendr
    @tmahendr Před 2 lety +1

    What sad is how much work and life commitment it takes to get here and walking away. You can say it’s part of life’s journey but while your worrying every night and studying you aren’t living at all and this no journey for that human

  • @J6Miami
    @J6Miami Před 2 lety +7

    So true man. Medicine is great but it’s SO over hyped. The realities of being a doctor/healthcare provider are not as glamorous as social media and society makes it out to bed it’s years upon years of non-stop studying and exams. The the actual job is hard work. Many times it’s hard PHYSICAL work, which people don’t take into account including hours of standing in long surgeries. Balance and freedom are key man and I wish I understood this earlier, but we’re so used to putting medicine on a pedestal.
    For the right person medicine is amazing, but if you find yourself on the fence, really think about why you want to pursue it.

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon Před 2 lety +2

      As one who has done all of that, you are absolutely right.

  • @beth3984
    @beth3984 Před 2 lety +8

    Yes please make videos on options after leaving medicine

  • @roythousand13
    @roythousand13 Před 2 lety +2

    People quitting or retiring early isn't only in the healthcare industry. Most major industries are experiencing this!

    • @bobsmith6742
      @bobsmith6742 Před 3 měsíci

      But healthcare in the U.S., the most regulated industry in the world, is experiencing a shortage of supply (physicians) but not a shortage of demand, especially with an aging population.

    • @roythousand13
      @roythousand13 Před 3 měsíci

      @@bobsmith6742 , I agree! We are both right!

  • @jayspark1091
    @jayspark1091 Před 2 lety +18

    Would love to see the options med students have that get their MD but don't want to continue with residency!

  • @michaeldemangone3890
    @michaeldemangone3890 Před rokem +5

    Hopefully something encouraging to those thinking about med school. I just finished my first block of medical school and loved it. Plenty of stressful moments, but I never felt like my life was mundane. There was a lot of joy in studying and working towards something that was difficult. I've had periods of my life that were much easier, but were way more of a drag. It's actually the challenge that has made medical school so awesome. It forces you to be focused and work. And while not everything you learn is the most useful, medical school and the career gives you so many unique opportunities that can be awesome. I was worried it would be too much, but a big part of medical school is not making it your identity. My best days and exams correlated with being content with the work I had put in and having grace with myself. Just know a lot of people say a lot of things about medical school, but it might just be the best 4 years of your life. We'll see how the journey continues. God bless

  • @noormohamed-db1ux
    @noormohamed-db1ux Před 2 lety +9

    Maybe the solution to the burnout problem is for doctors to not only be seen as the hero’s, but treated like ones. Which includes having a ranking system of doctors, having not to deal with red tape, and getting to wager there services to the best hospitals. Give them control of the job, substantially increase the amount of students admitted by medical schools, and give tons of incentives to keep doctors in their practice longer.
    As and aspiring physician, nothing makes me more sad than to see doctors be exploited to the point where the patient becomes secondary and care is contingent on wether or not the doctor is burnt out.

  • @kryzzyb3422
    @kryzzyb3422 Před 2 lety +5

    Timely vid. Finished medschool, passed the boards then took years off working in a far-flung community as the community doctor but eventually had to quit due to pandemic restrictions & other personal reasons.. now on the crossroads again whether to pursue residency or switch careers completely but cannot really consider the later due to the amount of time & dedication I’ve put into this. I guess I would still like to continue on this path but now choosing a specialty that have good work-life balance. To anyone on this path, premeds & those in medschool, goodluck & carry on if you really want it but if you have anything better you want to do then you might consider it first. If not, medicine will always be a rewarding career if you see your purpose in here ~ usually during clerkship year and few years of clinical exposure/practice will make you realize what doctor you want to be. In the end, be it in medicine or any other career it’ll always come with pain and sacrifice..the question is if that pain is worth risking for YOU. If not, it’s never wrong to look elsewhere!

    • @benjamingiuffria4446
      @benjamingiuffria4446 Před rokem

      Im in the same boat, but what I have discovered is funding will not 100% cover a second residency.

  • @GalaxyDude96
    @GalaxyDude96 Před 2 lety +6

    I would love a video of career options after medicine for doctors!

  • @mrarcade2504
    @mrarcade2504 Před 2 lety +4

    Definitely a video on alternative career choices after leaving medicine

  • @DurgaDevi-iy7xj
    @DurgaDevi-iy7xj Před 2 lety +16

    I will be honest I joined med school last year and I'm already thinking about entrepreneurship seriously!!!

    • @WatchClock99
      @WatchClock99 Před 2 lety +8

      Same, I don't intend to quit but I wouldn't want to rely on medicine for income.

    • @antjunior
      @antjunior Před 2 lety +1

      Same here

    • @bobsmith6742
      @bobsmith6742 Před 3 měsíci

      Joined? Most say accepted or enrolled in.

  • @AnastasiaLaurel
    @AnastasiaLaurel Před 2 lety +7

    They romanticize it. No one tells you how hard it will be.
    You have to really want it to continue.
    I’m only a med student and it’s made it have a whole new respect for doctors out there.

  • @leejaerim8972
    @leejaerim8972 Před 2 lety +10

    Yes I am interested in a video about career options after leaving medicine

  • @justirandall4285
    @justirandall4285 Před 2 lety +1

    Doctors are so underappreciated and not nearly as respected as they should be. When hired as a tech, they tell you that you are just as important as a physician and that if any physician is not nice to you report them and all the nurses and techs would boast that they got a physician fired because he yelled at a nurse who did something wrong or some other trivial thing. It is so sad, I'm sorry but no one comes to see the nurse and support staff.. so no you are not equal to a physician at least in position and knowledge level. My sons pediatrician committed suicide this year after his medical assistant reported him for not being nice to her when she couldn't room a patient and do vaccines in a timely manner, gave the wrong vaccines, etc. and claimed he was a "bully". So, they fired him which resulted in financial difficulties trying to open his own practice and his suicide.. R.I.P.

  • @asdfjklasdfjkl408
    @asdfjklasdfjkl408 Před 2 lety +14

    Yes please on the alternative career paths !!

    • @bettysmith4527
      @bettysmith4527 Před 2 lety

      You could live under the sea and star in your own show... Find a quirky friend that lives under a rock, and just hang out eating Krabby Patties all day.

  • @godsmagic9656
    @godsmagic9656 Před 2 lety +16

    Did you ever look into the fact that the MD degree outside of the USA is actually a bachelor's degree where students start med school right after 12th grade? Ask your MBBS coworkers, how old they were when they went to med school! You pay tuition fee for your Undergrad first, then no job with biochem or another biological degree, then you take out a loan and pay more tuition fee in Med school again because nobody values/ recognizes your UG even though those are the classes thought in Med School. The 4 years of Undergrad is waste of time because you realize, the basic science in med school is actually undergrad courses.

    • @kojoasante5005
      @kojoasante5005 Před 2 lety +5

      This is actually true. I'm in a country outside the US and I entered med school at the age of 17. But because here we enter right from 12th grade, the duration is actually 6 years divided into 3 pre-clinical years and 3 clinical years. The very first year is used for the basic sciences and we continue with the 'actual' medical courses from 2nd year- which I think is pretty cool and better than 4 years to get an undergrad degree before another 4 years in med school.
      Also we graduate and receive a BSc certificate after third year and then receive an MBBS certificate after the entire 6 years.

    • @godsmagic9656
      @godsmagic9656 Před 2 lety +3

      @@kojoasante5005 After taking STEP 1, 2 MBBS do residency and make the same amount of money after finishing residency. Same privilege.

    • @liv0003
      @liv0003 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kojoasante5005 did you finish medical school at 17👀? So you started medical school at 11? This sounds really strange. What country do you live in ???

    • @mannagarwal5390
      @mannagarwal5390 Před 2 lety +1

      @@liv0003 I have finished medical school at 21 years of age. I am from India. I got admitted to my first year when I was 17..

    • @liv0003
      @liv0003 Před 2 lety +1

      @@mannagarwal5390 admitted at 17 years old yes is quite common around the world but the guy above wrote that he FINISHED medical school at 17 and that his school lasted six years. So I wonder in which country do people start medical school at 11?👀

  • @La123x
    @La123x Před 2 lety +8

    Kevin you should definitely make a video about careers after leaving med school because like you said many of us feel stuck once we’re in

  • @alizain9638
    @alizain9638 Před 2 lety +2

    Yes please make a video on options after leaving medicine. Make a video on leaving medicine after getting M.D (during residency) and after residency. I'm curious what do they do if they don't have a successful channel like you do.

  • @nicoleanjelica7702
    @nicoleanjelica7702 Před 2 lety +4

    Yes please make a video on options if you leave medical school.

  • @Abdul_JaculBuratsadorSalsalani

    I'm a previous Operating Room Nurse who resigned from the job back in December 2018 after 8 years of practice. I graduated BSN in 2009. Then took up 6 months of Nurse Volunteer practice as it requires here in the Philippines for a Nurse to get hired way back then. But unfortunately, I wasn't hired... then tried to do Volunteer practice again for a different Hospital for about 1 year & 2 months before finally getting hired. FYI, Nurse Volunteer here doesn't pay you any amount... not a single dime... plus your workload is same as much as those paid StaffNurses... Plus we're always understaffed. Being placed as Floating Nurse( meaning you are being consistently pulled out from one area to another toxic understaff area) is one of my hated moments in life... while the most senior Nursed has some immunity to this... meaning.. we, the newer ones... are being treated like this... making us prone to committing medical errors.
    What makes this worse is the power tripping being done to us by Doctors, Senior Nurses, and Hospital Officials... who only knows to say " If you can't stand the work... then go leave & resign... we can always replace you MoFu!"
    When I started receiving my salary.. it was ₱13,400 (260$) net worth for a month in a 12 hours shift/duty hours... 4 to 5 days a week. Overtime not & will never be paid... hence we call it " Charity hours of duty... 😅... So if my duty starts at 6am... I should be physically present at the designated Hospital Area of duty by 5:30am... this for patient Endorsement activity between Outgoing & incoming Staff Nurses. Most often than not... I'm cleared to get home at 8 to 9pm... plus traffic jam... I'd usually be home at 11pm 😅. During Off Duty, I am not allowed to hang my phone due to "On-Call" protocols... were we are expected to report to duty when phoned everytime there's a severe lacking of staff nurse... Failure to respond will cause you to file an Incidental Report because it's a crime here not to respond immediately.
    There's this we call "Straight Duties" were you need to continue your duty for another 12hours shift because some staff were absent or or failed to attend their duty for some reason.... and it often happens to me. Plus some resident doctors treat us like one of their housemaid. While other doctors makes us the fall guy whenever they committed medical errors.... Then we also suffer heavy politics inside & outside of my previous Government Hospital.
    And some residents

  • @andrewdavid4363
    @andrewdavid4363 Před 2 lety +4

    Hi Kevin. Another nice video by you. I am an IMG. Yes it would be very kind of you to make a video on various career options after leaving medicine or other career options other than the clinical side; do include basic sciences, public health, etc. Stay blessed.

  • @OTnsg
    @OTnsg Před 2 lety +5

    I’ve enjoyed your videos, but discovered them after already in an attending role. Interestingly, this video highlights how much you have to offer my cohort as your career and perspectives evolve. A video on “after medicine” would be great, but your take on many topics relevant to attendings would be more valuable than a lot of CMEs.
    I love my job (academic endovascular neurosurgeon)-I suspect you have some insights that would help people like me optimize our fulfillment.
    Bravo and thank you.

  • @iamgopz
    @iamgopz Před 2 lety +3

    It was the online class that made me quit medschool after 2 years of studying. I was supposed to be meeting patients already to improve my clinical training. But instead of having the actual experience, I play pretend with doctors in front of my screen without doing physical exams. It was exhausting since I still had to make return demo videos to prove that I already know how to perform it. I don't know anything about video editing or even taking a video myself so I had to spend a couple hours, hours that I could have used to study. Maybe I'm just making up reasons to justify why i gave up on this opportunity but I didn't care anymore. What I know is that I was angry and sad all the time and it lead me to lash out at everyone. I'm just hoping right now that I won't regret this for the rest of my life.

  • @ROCKY-pu1zt
    @ROCKY-pu1zt Před 2 lety

    Sir, Doctor, thank you, you have singlehandedly brought to the table clarity, as I am a mature student wanting to become a GP and go to medical school. You are an honest breath of fresh air to Medicine, thank you

  • @AestheticMD1
    @AestheticMD1 Před 2 lety +5

    Hey Kevin, a video on other options one can pursue upon leaving medicine or CONCURRENTLY with a career in medicine (i.e. I'm an anesthesiology resident pursuing an interventional pain fellowship and hope eventually to have other businesses on the side) would be extremely helpful. Thanks and keep up the great work.

  • @grantdenton554
    @grantdenton554 Před 2 lety +2

    I remember this subject being discussed in "old" media back in the 90s / 00s. Back then, it started with the intrusion of insurance companies, and then continued with the sudden tsunami of foreign doctors. The foreign doctors were paid less and not respected, then it seemed all doctors were paid less and not respected.

    • @Sparks95
      @Sparks95 Před rokem

      history definately rhymes

  • @IMarx
    @IMarx Před 2 lety +2

    M2 here, hanging on bc patient contact is the only fulfilling part of my med journey so far. Plus everything I would want to leave medical school for is in shambles bc of COVID (music, films, cooking). I been broke/in debt all my life and ironically enough I’m living better rn on loans than I ever did back home or when I worked 60 hours a week lol

  • @anjalil614
    @anjalil614 Před 2 lety +41

    Would you be able to share options for medical students who graduate with their MD/DO and dont pursue residency? Also, how long does it take to transition to that nonclinical role?
    Thanks for the great video!

    • @dju1719
      @dju1719 Před 2 lety +1

      Agree, please do!

    • @riyadidwal8152
      @riyadidwal8152 Před 2 lety +2

      Can I ask you what are the job opportunities after mbbs?

  • @oh_k8
    @oh_k8 Před rokem +1

    Clogging up med school positions to become an entrepreneur is why many of us have no family doctor..🤔

  • @dianacarreras3461
    @dianacarreras3461 Před 2 lety +2

    Yes, please talk about the different alternatives after leaving medicine

  • @Dee-oq5ms
    @Dee-oq5ms Před 2 lety +2

    I’m not a doctor but a nurse and I’d rather work in tech & plan on leaving soon myself. It’s not worth it to work in healthcare. And I foresee a serious crisis soon.

  • @Kwippy
    @Kwippy Před 2 lety +2

    For some it is the pressure and stresses of work, the burn outs, the constant threat of lawsuits. I have full sympathy for my colleagues whose lives have been made a misery by work while they have tried to help people. Other doctors left because they realized that they could be making much more money outside of medicine. This includes several famous CZcamsrs, and for these people, I feel nothing but contempt.

  • @tinamanuel2305
    @tinamanuel2305 Před 2 lety +114

    Good video, the best decision I made as a RN nurse was to create a side hustle for extra income streams. It has really helped me and my family financially stable.

    • @jeanekarussell2195
      @jeanekarussell2195 Před 2 lety +7

      Great stuff, how did you go about that please enlighten me, I'm interested.

    • @tinamanuel2305
      @tinamanuel2305 Před 2 lety +9

      @@jeanekarussell2195 I made a couple of investments but my investment in forex and crypto has been yielding good profits and I don't think of stopping anytime soon.

    • @robertzajac8234
      @robertzajac8234 Před 2 lety +9

      Stock, Real Estate, hedge funds and ETFs are good investments as well 😊

    • @jeanekarussell2195
      @jeanekarussell2195 Před 2 lety +6

      @@tinamanuel2305 I'd like to learn more about forex, I've made research but I still get confused at some point, what do you suggest ? I'm 31 now. Really looking into investing for a long time now. Can you share how you started your investment, type of investments and how you are earning from it please?

    • @agentgreg9854
      @agentgreg9854 Před 2 lety +4

      Nice one 👏

  • @Sarandipitously
    @Sarandipitously Před měsícem

    Yes, please make a video about what to do after leaving med school please. Thanks so much!

  • @Panda-er4nd
    @Panda-er4nd Před 2 lety +9

    YT is paying better money !!!

  • @WyattOSchaefer
    @WyattOSchaefer Před 2 lety +1

    Yes, would appreciate hearing the potential careers for MDs that are "not medicine" or are not the classical idea of "physician"

  • @kycezaiter4012
    @kycezaiter4012 Před 2 lety +3

    Definitely make a video about what we can do after getting an MD or DO that’s not practice

  • @theratracer6937
    @theratracer6937 Před 2 lety +2

    That was exactly I was looking for. It would be great if you make a video on different careers that one can opt for after leaving medicine.

  • @johnkoch1888
    @johnkoch1888 Před 2 lety +2

    A physician with student debt, a mortgage, auto loans, kids, and an obligation to appear affluent has a very strong incentive to continue in medicine. The alternatives are not as remunerative. Most people who work in computer science earn less, and they must also put up with unsavory supervisors, bureaucracy, and corporate risks. A private practice, hospital or insurance company may dissolve, but physicians can almost always find or create another job, even when past age 50.

  • @rufussweeneymd
    @rufussweeneymd Před 2 lety +2

    Yes! Career options after leaving medicine, please!

  • @h.maekebay6451
    @h.maekebay6451 Před 2 lety +3

    Would love to see a video on what options MDs and DOs have post-graduation!

  • @happypenguin7945
    @happypenguin7945 Před 2 lety +15

    This is why when my medical school gave me the option to pursue an MD/MBA dual degree, I took the opportunity. If I ever feel burned out, I can always take a detour. Otherwise, I can practice until I am unhappy, and there’s always that opportunity to run a side business while practicing. Always have that Plan B just like when you were applying to college and med schools

  • @jicalzad
    @jicalzad Před 2 lety +3

    I thnk pre-med students have a better advantage now than before about what med school, residency, and physician life is going to be like. Obviously, they won’t truly know until they go thru it themselves, but there’s so much info now on Youttube and online blogs/forums that give premed students a peek at life as a med student/doctor. Before, most kids only watched TV shows like ER or Greys Anatomy and thought that was what it was truly like

  • @JulietChung
    @JulietChung Před 2 lety +21

    I appreciate your videos and content! Its very empowering but how do we also address the shortage of doctors? What about figuring out a way to reduce the stress admin gives and also incentivize doctors to stay in medicine? I think the real issue is the toxicity of how the environment of working in medicine can truly be

    • @jameyatesmauriat6116
      @jameyatesmauriat6116 Před rokem

      Nobody cares about this matter now and later. Some say life is chances, the better you invest in it and earlier, the better you live. If chances not taken earlier, nobody would help you. That’s life. There can be stress reducers, however, I doubt there would be one. Life is getting harder and worse.

    • @sunriselotus
      @sunriselotus Před 7 měsíci

      Yes, the environment is very 5:20 toxic and causes illness for its workers.

  • @kummdogmillionaire
    @kummdogmillionaire Před 2 lety +1

    Careers after leaving medicine would be a great video!

  • @cezarbarbu
    @cezarbarbu Před 2 lety +2

    Please make that video about options that you have leaving medicine.
    Especially regarding start-ups or how to combine coding with clinical expertise.

    • @cezarbarbu
      @cezarbarbu Před 2 lety

      And how to make the most out of the time already invested (in order to avoid the sunken cost)

  • @ProfessorSetterby
    @ProfessorSetterby Před 2 lety

    Healthcare needs a major overhaul. As a nurse I feel similar reasons for burnout. Ratios, calls vacation needs to be changed. Money is wasted on insurance companies and don’t benefit the people doing the work in hospitals etc.

  • @restalot1
    @restalot1 Před 2 lety +1

    I also dropped out of medical school. Was a tough decision but ultimately people should choose what they feel is right for them

  • @gloriamoody-mtomboti120

    Thank you for this information. Yes! I would love to know whats out there for doctors leaving clinical medicine.

  • @negarnasiri5378
    @negarnasiri5378 Před rokem

    I studied electrical engineering and now I started to be a good software engineer and in future I want to have my business and be a boss of myself and your videos inspire me that for starting never is late.