When the mundane isn’t

October 10, 2008

Residency trains you for the critical or severe cases, leaving the seemingly simplest cases to be the most challenging. Shadowfax reflects on an example where a 1-week old infant presented vomiting blood.

Similarly, when I first started primary care I was comfortable running codes and knowing what to do in an acute MI. It was the rashes that I saw in the office that I found more challenging.

Residency prepares you well for hospital medicine – which is one reason why many new graduates prefer hospitalist positions. It’s in their comfort zone.

If we want more Internal Medicine primary care doctors, residencies need to do a better job teaching office-based medicine.

Or else it is no wonder that only 2 percent of Internal Medicine graduates enter primary care.



Related posts:

  1. A surgeon dumps post-op patients to hospitalists
  2. Should general internal medicine merge with family practice?
  3. Primary care shortage and physician recruiters
  4. "10 Things Your Primary-Care Physician Won’t Tell You"
  5. New hospitalist advice
  6. Should hospitalists or intensivists manage ICU patients?
  7. Foreign medical graduates and mid-levels will provide the majority of tomorrow’s primary care


KevinMD.com on Facebook


  Follow on Twitter   Subscribe



Comments on this entry are closed.

Previous post: Celiac disease

Next post: Having everything done

Site Meter