Showing posts with label Rural surgery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rural surgery. Show all posts

Monday, March 17, 2014

A med student asks about rural surgery training



Lionel, a first-year med student at a US school, writes

I'm really passionate about rural surgery and the idea of having a wide variety of procedures that you have to be able to take care of—ortho, c-sections, urology, ENT, abdomen, etc. But the thing is, everyone I talk to says this is an unreasonable expectation to have going forward as current training isn't conducive to learning all those things in 5 years, given the number of fellows present and the general trend towards super-specialization these days. Yet, I read about massive needs for rural general surgery. It doesn't quite add up. 

What is your take on this? Also, how do I go about pursuing a career as a rural surgeon in this academic/training environment? Community program? Academic program? I know Cooperstown, Oregon and Gunderson have rural surgery fellowships but I haven't heard anything about them or how to determine if you need to pursue this extra training.

Good questions.

An email exchange yielded more background information. He went to college in a rural area, has worked in an orphanage on a farm, and spent some time with physicians in rural Africa.

He has thought things through very well and seems quite committed to becoming a rural surgeon.

In medical school, he plans to do one elective in rural surgery and another at a hospital that serves as the primary clinic/surgical center for 160,000 people in a poor African country.

He is also going to spend a summer doing research at an academic center just to get an idea of what that is like.

I sent him some links to papers on the subject of rural surgery most of which he had already seen.

Here is what I think.

If you choose the right program, you would not have to take an extra year of fellowship to become a competent rural surgeon. For example, the Oregon program includes a year of rural surgery in their five-year curriculum for those who wish to do it.

There are some other programs besides the ones you named, and there may be more by the time you are ready to choose a residency. You might also think about programs with international rotations.

If you are truly committed to becoming a rural surgeon, a pure academic program is probably not for you. You are not likely to get enough diversified subspecialty experience in such a place. A community hospital program that offers a chance to rotate on some of the subspecialties and OB would be better, and there will be few or no fellows competing for cases.

I hope that some readers will contribute other perspectives to the discussion.