Yes please. There is a lot of gray areas regarding this on the Internet and I cannot effectively get the difference between them. Also if possible which countries provide residency training and pathways for both of them? Thank you. I enjoyed the video as usual!
@@Monica-gj2yx I’ve noticed you’ve replied to a lot of comments! I think people know what the difference is and can google it! That’s not why they are asking, they’d like a video on it. His comparisons are interesting and entertaining.
Definitely. OBGYN is not only C-sections. It also includes complicated robotic surgeries, vaginal surgeries for prolapse repairs, and urogyn. Also, can’t forget to mention that Gynecologic Oncologists are considered some of the best surgeons (some argue that Gyn Oncs are better surgeons than colorectal surgeons, but I do not like to make comparisons). While it is true that ObGyn is only a 4-year surgical specialty, fellowships within ObGyn can be as long as 4 years (8 total). General ObGyns and fellowship-trained ObGyns are 100% skilled surgeons. Let’s change this bullshit stigma/misinformation.
Yes OBGYN is absolutely a surgical specialty! But something I have gathered about this man is that he is very cocky and comes off as thinking he is better than everyone else (especially other types of doctors and healthcare providers). I lost respect for him after his video on PAs vs MDs where he used an analogy saying PAs are like flight attendants while doctors are like pilots. He did not give PAs enough credit. This is coming from someone in medical school. I could tell his feeling of superiority over PAs, NPs etc. from that video.
Hematology Oncology vs Gastroenterology. Both are IM fellowships, but I would love to hear about a heavy procedure specialty vs a light procedure specialty.
A video on Medical vs. Surgical vs. Radiational Oncology along with the which one of these above three doctors have to through more emotional hurt of dealing with dying cancer patient which one of the above oncologists will go through the least emotional torture of seeing a dying cancer patient the most 🤔
As always great video clearing up some confusion in the medical community. Love the "Level of Difficulty" rating of "Emotional Damage"!!! (Ref Steven He). Also, the thing I have seen over the years as a patient is that non-surgical specialties can do minor surgical and diagnostic procedures with you under anesthetic, but not need a surgeon. Finally, all your suggestions would be great for next video and I would add the difference between PM&Rs and PTs. Thanks
I really like how he made the distinction between enjoying technical vs intellectual stimulation. For surgeons who can’t stand sitting in one place thinking about a problem for hours, I can’t stand being stuck in an OR for hours (esp. as a med student) executing a problem that in my mind, has already been solved. My surgery rotations were pretty much hell because most cases, the “fun” part (ie, the diagnostic stuff) has already been solved. Plus I’m extremely clumsy with my hands! 😂
Can you please make a video about the steps of applying to a US med school after finishing a BS degree as an international student. Also, the same in regard to applying for residency as an international med student.
The first day of my general surgery rotation was super cool. I thought I could go into it for residency. By the end of the first week, I knew it wasn't for me. The lifestyle was absolutely terrible. There's no way I could do that for 5+ years without becoming a changed, bitter person, or having thoughts of self harm.
Please do a video on surgical Physicians and surgical PA-Cs. I want to do surgery. I’m not after the prestige rather the intellectual stimuli and reward of surgery. I know there’s a pretty big difference in responsibility and schooling, so I know the roles in surgery are probably vast in comparison. A rolled in surgery video about the surgeon/PA-C/ everyone else and how they interact with the patient in surgery.
Hey Dr. Juball, I have been watching your videos since high school, and I am very interested in psychiatry. Can you make a general video on how to excel in undergraduate as a pre-med even if you have been diagnosed with mental disorders (depression, ADD)? My journey into medicine was influenced greatly by my personal life and I am sure there are many others who this relates to. Thank you
Hey buddy, I love your videos a lot and I watch almost all of them. Can you please make a video on Studying Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Engineering and them going to Medical School for MD Program here in Canada and USA. It will be really helpful if you can do this and also which extra curriculars and volunteers are best for this field. Thanks a lot I hope you become the best doctor in the world.
In this ideo Maybe you should have focused more on what surgeons are taught in "General Surgery Residency" and what medical students are taught in "Internal medicine Residency" How DIFFERENT is General surgery from internal medicine in terms of information taught, critical thinking necessity in each field, and How much they OVERLAP in terms of what they taught the only thing that I learned this video is, "Surgeons are paid more than Medicine doctors, surgeons have long career path and one shouldn't become a doctor for money" which I and most people already know about No offence but true feedback, I didn't learn anything new that I already didn't know about from this video, and the video is definitely not up to the medical "Insider" level 😊 .
Sorry to hear that. This video is focused on helping people make the best career choice. In medical school, the curriculum for any type of doctor will be the same. All med students have the same clinical rotations too in the later part of medical school. It's residency that differentiates the training paths, and by that time, it's far more about practical, hands-on learning than information taught.
@MedSchoolInsiders 🤦♂️I guess, you didn't read my comment totally Nowhere in the comment I spoke about medical college, I only spoke about the residencies "Internal medicine" and "General surgeon" how much of a difference there is in between these 2 Residencies in terms of whatever information we learn in these residences not essentially through books, Information doesn't automatically mean, I talking about sitting and reading from a book In my primary comment, i was talking about or, more precisely, saying about your should spoke about how much does the residencies "General surgery" and "Internal medicine" Overlap in terms of critical thinking, information taught in various forms and which is more monotonous and etc. because if a person wants to become an oncologist, then he has to choose between surgical or medical oncology besides radiation oncology to become a surgical oncologist, one should choose the residency General surgery whereas to become a medical oncologist, one should choose the residency internal medicine so now a student must choose between a medicine doctor versus surgery doctor so what is the difference between these two "Medical vs surgical doctors" in terms of what information they learn in various way in their respective residencies and which is more critical thinking dependent which is more monotonous, how much they overlap and etc I hope you understand at least this time but if you don't, then you win, leave it 🤦♂️.
@@Manikanta.Rapolu I saw your not one... but TWO face palm emojis, and stopped reading immediately. no one likes a passive-aggressive diva. Reduce all of that emotional outrage to a minimum and simply ask the question. There is no need for face palm emojis. Nor is there a need for that rhetorical flourish ("You win, leave it").
Please describe the role of a PA-C in the operating room and how vast the difference is compared to being a surgeon. I want to do surgery, but is becoming a PA worth it , or should I pursue being a surgeon?
12:46 I would disagree There can be a balance even if your a surgeon (granted not all of them some are) So this rule wouldn’t apply to ENT or optha for example As your still a surgeon with a very chilled back lifestyle
A surgeon is someone who performs surgery. Obgyns perform some of the commonest surgeries in the US (hysterectomies, caesarean sections). They are major surgeries, by the way. But somehow, they are not surgeons, according to you. Why? You can not say it's because they spend too much time doing clinical instead of surgical work. All surgical specialists do so. They do not just walk into the OR daily to operate on patients they didn't even see in the clinic or ward.
Ophthalmology and OB/GYN have some surgical procedures but they don't go into a strictly surgical residency. We covered both in our 36 Surgical Specialties Explained video: th-cam.com/video/N69oIZO5Bj8/w-d-xo.html
Same bro they say the same in all videos, but you won't be able to find that pdf in any link I guess they would send us a mail of the pdf if we put the mail in that link page, or maybe we can see the download option after we put in our email id's which I am not going to
@ I have seen an excel sheet in that shows the number of LORs, research and steps scores required for each program. I’m more interested in finding that excel sheet that I once came across by. If anyone finds it pls share it with me
The Specialty Competitiveness Index is linked in the description of our videos. It includes the data for 22 specialties. We send you a link to the online Excel Sheet. If you don't want to be a part future emails, or our newsletter, you can unsubscribe any time. medschoolinsiders.com/specialty-competitiveness-index/ Additionally, you can find detailed breakdowns of the 5 most competitive specialties and 5 least competitive specialties in the corresponding guides on our website: medschoolinsiders.com/medical-student/most-competitive-specialties/
There are surgical components to both OB/GYN and Ophthalmology, which is why we included them in our 36 Surgical Career Paths explained video. For the purposes of this video, we focused on medical paths that require a surgical residency, whether a categorical surgical residency or one that requires a general surgery residency first.
It’s not so much a mistake, OB/GYN generally aren’t considered surgeons because of their training, OB/GYN do surgery but it’s more blunt surgeries, I think they should be considered surgeons because they do surgery but it’s just not how the medical speciality is categorized.
They don't do a a surgery residency. They spend most their time in clinic but learn to perform a couple crude surgeries. IDK its a grey area. I know one family medicine resident that did a fellowship for FM docs that allows them to do appendectomy, choles, and hernias, but I woudn't call him a surgeon tbh. its a semantics game lol.
Great explanation @xdsf3702 Ophthalmology and OB/GYN were included in our 36 Surgical Career Paths explained video because they perform some surgeries. For the purposes of this video, we focused on medical paths that require a surgical residency, whether a categorical surgical residency or one that requires a general surgery residency first. There is a grey area for sure. Ophthalmology and OB/GYN perform some surgery but it is not the sole focus of residency.
@@MedSchoolInsiders Wrong in so many levels. Explain then how metastatic ovarian cancer is managed without the high skills of a gyn oncologist trained in complex open, laparoscopic, and robotic surgery. Gyn oncologists are trained in lymph node dissections that are often adjacent to major vessels (I.e. the aorta) , splenectomies, and bowel resections and repairs. Please correct this misinformation. With these types of comments and videos, you continue the stigma and misinformation towards the vast field of OBGYN.
OB/GYN and ophthalmology include some surgical procedures but they do not require a surgical residency. We covered both in our 36 Surgical Specialties Explained video: th-cam.com/video/N69oIZO5Bj8/w-d-xo.html
@@MedSchoolInsiders I would say Ophthalmology is a surgical specialty, if ENT made the cut then I think optha should as well Seems weird you included ENT but not ophtha , mind if you explain why ? Cause to me their in the same ball park where they mix in both medical and surgical yet somehow one of them made it and the other didn’t
Interventional cardiologist Vs Cardiothoracic surgeon vs Cardiologist Vs Vascular surgeon Would be a epic special episode someday
Yes please
I need it rn
Neurology vs Neurosurgery
Neurologists treat patients with medication, while neurosurgeons operate on the brain and spinal cord.
Well explained round of applause @@Monica-gj2yx
@@Monica-gj2yx I don't think that's what they asked for
EM physician vs trauma surgeon please!!
this please ^^
Yes please. There is a lot of gray areas regarding this on the Internet and I cannot effectively get the difference between them. Also if possible which countries provide residency training and pathways for both of them? Thank you. I enjoyed the video as usual!
I definitely would love to see EM vs trauma surgery!
Cardiologist/Interventional cardiologist vs cardio thoracic surgeon
A cardiologist prescribes medication to heart patients while cardiac surgeons operate on the heart and major blood vessels.
@@Monica-gj2yx
I’ve noticed you’ve replied to a lot of comments! I think people know what the difference is and can google it! That’s not why they are asking, they’d like a video on it. His comparisons are interesting and entertaining.
Obgyn is DEFINITELY a surgical specialty
Nah
@ do you know how many surgeries we perform?
@@neescott 100% agree ob/gyn definitely on the surgery side.
Definitely. OBGYN is not only C-sections. It also includes complicated robotic surgeries, vaginal surgeries for prolapse repairs, and urogyn. Also, can’t forget to mention that Gynecologic Oncologists are considered some of the best surgeons (some argue that Gyn Oncs are better surgeons than colorectal surgeons, but I do not like to make comparisons). While it is true that ObGyn is only a 4-year surgical specialty, fellowships within ObGyn can be as long as 4 years (8 total). General ObGyns and fellowship-trained ObGyns are 100% skilled surgeons. Let’s change this bullshit stigma/misinformation.
Yes OBGYN is absolutely a surgical specialty! But something I have gathered about this man is that he is very cocky and comes off as thinking he is better than everyone else (especially other types of doctors and healthcare providers). I lost respect for him after his video on PAs vs MDs where he used an analogy saying PAs are like flight attendants while doctors are like pilots. He did not give PAs enough credit. This is coming from someone in medical school. I could tell his feeling of superiority over PAs, NPs etc. from that video.
Anesthesiology is a mix of both worlds
💪🏽
Pathology vs Infectious disease!
Hematology Oncology vs Gastroenterology. Both are IM fellowships, but I would love to hear about a heavy procedure specialty vs a light procedure specialty.
Neurology vs Psychiatry
Most neurologists are also board-certified in psychiatry. Dr. Sigmund Freud (the father of psychiatry) was a neurologist.
@@Monica-gj2yxthis is not true by the way for people reading this
We need more videos of these! I really love this new series!
Thanks! We're already working on the next one.
A video on
Medical vs. Surgical vs. Radiational Oncology
along with the which one of these above three doctors have to through more emotional hurt of dealing with dying cancer patient
which one of the above oncologists will go through the least emotional torture of seeing a dying cancer patient the most 🤔
Diagnostic radioglogy vs general surgery or subspecialities as both are for anatomy focused.
As always great video clearing up some confusion in the medical community. Love the "Level of Difficulty" rating of "Emotional Damage"!!! (Ref Steven He). Also, the thing I have seen over the years as a patient is that non-surgical specialties can do minor surgical and diagnostic procedures with you under anesthetic, but not need a surgeon. Finally, all your suggestions would be great for next video and I would add the difference between PM&Rs and PTs. Thanks
Definitely wanna hear about diagnostic vs interventional radiology!
I really like how he made the distinction between enjoying technical vs intellectual stimulation. For surgeons who can’t stand sitting in one place thinking about a problem for hours, I can’t stand being stuck in an OR for hours (esp. as a med student) executing a problem that in my mind, has already been solved. My surgery rotations were pretty much hell because most cases, the “fun” part (ie, the diagnostic stuff) has already been solved. Plus I’m extremely clumsy with my hands! 😂
Heyyyyyy man just a small suggestion, you should do Diagnostic vs Interventional Radiologist! you know that sounds like a fantastic idea...
Can you please make a video about the steps of applying to a US med school after finishing a BS degree as an international student. Also, the same in regard to applying for residency as an international med student.
The first day of my general surgery rotation was super cool. I thought I could go into it for residency. By the end of the first week, I knew it wasn't for me. The lifestyle was absolutely terrible. There's no way I could do that for 5+ years without becoming a changed, bitter person, or having thoughts of self harm.
Cardiothoracic surgery vs. Neurosurgery
I want to see this one!!!
FM vs. IM
Cardiothoracic surgery vs Trauma Surgery please
Loved the video as always
Maybe Cardiology/interventional cards and CT surgery
Thats why I want to become a otolaryngologist because it has the diagnosis puzzle part and then the surgical part as well
I think "Interventional Vs Diagnostic Radiologist" is a very good idea, I see a few other handsome fellows suggesting the same thing.
Please do a video on surgical Physicians and surgical PA-Cs. I want to do surgery. I’m not after the prestige rather the intellectual stimuli and reward of surgery. I know there’s a pretty big difference in responsibility and schooling, so I know the roles in surgery are probably vast in comparison. A rolled in surgery video about the surgeon/PA-C/ everyone else and how they interact with the patient in surgery.
Doctor vs Nurse Practitioner
Neurology Vs Neurosurgery
Diagnostic vs interventional radiology
Diagnostic vs. interventional radiology!!
Hey Dr. Juball,
I have been watching your videos since high school, and I am very interested in psychiatry. Can you make a general video on how to excel in undergraduate as a pre-med even if you have been diagnosed with mental disorders (depression, ADD)? My journey into medicine was influenced greatly by my personal life and I am sure there are many others who this relates to.
Thank you
You don't need to make a video about this, but I was curious about what procedures a cosmetic dermatologist performs compared to a plastic surgeon.
My dr., RIP, went to stanford and yale med school. He was awesome.
We need to hear more from urology
Doctor vs Nurse Practicioner!! 💯
Hey buddy, I love your videos a lot and I watch almost all of them. Can you please make a video on Studying Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Engineering and them going to Medical School for MD Program here in Canada and USA. It will be really helpful if you can do this and also which extra curriculars and volunteers are best for this field. Thanks a lot I hope you become the best doctor in the world.
Diagnostic radiology vs general surgery or subspecialities as both are anatomy focused
Do Interventional Radiologist vs Diagnostic Radiologist next! Radiology vs Radiology hoorah!
Dang no love for ophthalmology
it's the best of both worlds
He’s a repeat offender!
In this ideo
Maybe you should have focused more on what surgeons are taught in "General Surgery Residency" and what medical students are taught in "Internal medicine Residency"
How DIFFERENT is General surgery from internal medicine in terms of information taught, critical thinking necessity in each field, and How much they OVERLAP in terms of what they taught
the only thing that I learned this video is, "Surgeons are paid more than Medicine doctors, surgeons have long career path and one shouldn't become a doctor for money" which I and most people already know about
No offence but true feedback, I didn't learn anything new that I already didn't know about from this video, and the video is definitely not up to the medical "Insider" level 😊 .
Sorry to hear that. This video is focused on helping people make the best career choice. In medical school, the curriculum for any type of doctor will be the same. All med students have the same clinical rotations too in the later part of medical school. It's residency that differentiates the training paths, and by that time, it's far more about practical, hands-on learning than information taught.
@MedSchoolInsiders 🤦♂️I guess, you didn't read my comment totally
Nowhere in the comment I spoke about medical college, I only spoke about the residencies "Internal medicine" and "General surgeon"
how much of a difference there is in between these 2 Residencies in terms of whatever information we learn in these residences not essentially through books, Information doesn't automatically mean, I talking about sitting and reading from a book
In my primary comment, i was talking about or, more precisely, saying about
your should spoke about
how much does the residencies "General surgery" and "Internal medicine" Overlap in terms of critical thinking, information taught in various forms and which is more monotonous and etc.
because if a person wants to become an oncologist, then he has to choose between surgical or medical oncology besides radiation oncology
to become a surgical oncologist, one should choose the residency General surgery
whereas to become a medical oncologist, one should choose the residency internal medicine
so now a student must choose between a medicine doctor versus surgery doctor
so what is the difference between these two "Medical vs surgical doctors" in terms of what information they learn in various way in their respective residencies and which is more critical thinking dependent which is more monotonous, how much they overlap and etc
I hope you understand at least this time
but if you don't, then you win, leave it 🤦♂️.
@@Manikanta.Rapolu I saw your not one... but TWO face palm emojis, and stopped reading immediately. no one likes a passive-aggressive diva. Reduce all of that emotional outrage to a minimum and simply ask the question. There is no need for face palm emojis. Nor is there a need for that rhetorical flourish ("You win, leave it").
Doctor vs. Nurse practitioner please !!!
Doctor vs nurse practitioner!
I think Interventional vs Diagnostic Radiologist should be your next episode
Can you do a video on electrophysiology cardiology please?
Couuulldd we get Diagnostic vs Interventional Radiologist?
Please describe the role of a PA-C in the operating room and how vast the difference is compared to being a surgeon. I want to do surgery, but is becoming a PA worth it , or should I pursue being a surgeon?
Can you do so you want to be a preventative medicine?
Neurosurgeon vs Orthopedic surgeon plzzzzzzzzzz 😭🙏
I thought for some reason the title was like "explosion doctor vs surgeon" 😂. Was expecting a completely different video
Fuck yeah we needed this
🧠 Psychiatry vs Neurology please!!
Neurosurgery vs orthopedic surgery 😮
Different psychiatry options please
Orthopedic surgeon vs sports medicine doctor
Diagnostic vs. interventional radiology
How about Cardiothoracic surgery vs cardiovascular surgery?
please do gastroenterology vs orthopeidc suregery. ALSO PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE DO A A SO U WANT TO BE EPSIODE ON NEPHROLOGY
12:46 I would disagree
There can be a balance even if your a surgeon (granted not all of them some are)
So this rule wouldn’t apply to ENT or optha for example
As your still a surgeon with a very chilled back lifestyle
Diagonal vs Internal radiologist :)
Where is pediatric surgery or neonatal surgery reproductive/ fertility surgery? Why are these specialities not mentioned?
A surgeon is someone who performs surgery. Obgyns perform some of the commonest surgeries in the US (hysterectomies, caesarean sections). They are major surgeries, by the way. But somehow, they are not surgeons, according to you. Why? You can not say it's because they spend too much time doing clinical instead of surgical work. All surgical specialists do so. They do not just walk into the OR daily to operate on patients they didn't even see in the clinic or ward.
Cardio thoracic surgeon vs neuro surgeon
What about pathology, parasitology..... Are they medical??
Neurosurgery..🙌❤️
My grades aren’t the best, maybe I can’t compete for the speciality I want.
pediatrics vs internal medicine or family medicine
Why is obgyn a nonsurgical specialty?
Please do Neonatal Surgeon and Neonatologist
Neurology vs Psychiatry!!!!
ENT vs Plastic Surgery please
How can an IMG match into Surgery?
Amazing video wow
Thanks!
Did something on how to be a GP 😢
70 hour weeks for life. Yeah, no. The 70s-90s was the golden age to be a doctor. Back when you were a god. Now you’re an employee, on a time quota.
What about ophthalmology?
Ophthalmology and OB/GYN have some surgical procedures but they don't go into a strictly surgical residency. We covered both in our 36 Surgical Specialties Explained video: th-cam.com/video/N69oIZO5Bj8/w-d-xo.html
Oral and Maxillofacial pathologist vs oral and Maxillofacial surgeon
Interventional vs Diagnostic Radiology
I couldn’t find the excel sheet shown in the video at 9:26. Please share a link
Same bro
they say the same in all videos, but you won't be able to find that pdf in any link
I guess they would send us a mail of the pdf if we put the mail in that link page, or maybe we can see the download option after we put in our email id's
which I am not going to
@ I have seen an excel sheet in that shows the number of LORs, research and steps scores required for each program. I’m more interested in finding that excel sheet that I once came across by. If anyone finds it pls share it with me
The Specialty Competitiveness Index is linked in the description of our videos. It includes the data for 22 specialties. We send you a link to the online Excel Sheet. If you don't want to be a part future emails, or our newsletter, you can unsubscribe any time. medschoolinsiders.com/specialty-competitiveness-index/
Additionally, you can find detailed breakdowns of the 5 most competitive specialties and 5 least competitive specialties in the corresponding guides on our website:
medschoolinsiders.com/medical-student/most-competitive-specialties/
NP vs. PA
13:57 ophthalmology vs ENT
Dermatology vs ENT
any mix of these 3
Shouldn’t it be Primary Care vs Surgery for this one?
Radiology vs dermatology
Psych vs Neurology
Emergency Medicine Vs Anesthesiologist plsssss
2:13 OBGYN isn’t a surgical specialty? What…
There are surgical components to both OB/GYN and Ophthalmology, which is why we included them in our 36 Surgical Career Paths explained video. For the purposes of this video, we focused on medical paths that require a surgical residency, whether a categorical surgical residency or one that requires a general surgery residency first.
I think you guys just made a mistake in this video. A correction would be appreciated.
It’s not so much a mistake, OB/GYN generally aren’t considered surgeons because of their training, OB/GYN do surgery but it’s more blunt surgeries, I think they should be considered surgeons because they do surgery but it’s just not how the medical speciality is categorized.
@@cadeolson8786 then why does ACS recognize OBGYN as a surgical specialty?…
I can stipulate that FMOB isn’t a surgical specialty. However, OBGYN is.
Doctor vs dentist (dentist aren’t doctors) coming from a pre dentist student
aren't derm and anesthesia still some of the highest paid specialties though?
Derm and anesthesiology don't even make the top 12 highest paid specialties: th-cam.com/video/TjqYLuaCG58/w-d-xo.html
how is obgyn a non surgical specialty? :|
Radiographer vs Doctor
Anesthesiologist vs. crna
Family medicine vs internal med
I thought OB-GYN’s were surgeons?
@jesusthesaviorof they are, technically. Kevin is just biased.
They don't do a a surgery residency. They spend most their time in clinic but learn to perform a couple crude surgeries. IDK its a grey area. I know one family medicine resident that did a fellowship for FM docs that allows them to do appendectomy, choles, and hernias, but I woudn't call him a surgeon tbh. its a semantics game lol.
Great explanation @xdsf3702
Ophthalmology and OB/GYN were included in our 36 Surgical Career Paths explained video because they perform some surgeries. For the purposes of this video, we focused on medical paths that require a surgical residency, whether a categorical surgical residency or one that requires a general surgery residency first. There is a grey area for sure. Ophthalmology and OB/GYN perform some surgery but it is not the sole focus of residency.
@@MedSchoolInsiders Wrong in so many levels. Explain then how metastatic ovarian cancer is managed without the high skills of a gyn oncologist trained in complex open, laparoscopic, and robotic surgery. Gyn oncologists are trained in lymph node dissections that are often adjacent to major vessels (I.e. the aorta) , splenectomies, and bowel resections and repairs. Please correct this misinformation. With these types of comments and videos, you continue the stigma and misinformation towards the vast field of OBGYN.
Maybe Radiologist vs Radiation Oncologist! Or Diagnostic vs Interventional Radiologist!
psychiatry vs neurology
you said that salary of a neurosurgeon is about 760,000 dollars. is it the starting salary?
Average salary www.doximity.com/reports/physician-compensation-report/2024
I like podiatry because you get that 3 year surgical residency which is cool
Pediatrics vs internal med
2:23 ophthalmology didn’t make the cut 😅
Where is it surgical or medical ?
I would say surgical
OB/GYN and ophthalmology include some surgical procedures but they do not require a surgical residency. We covered both in our 36 Surgical Specialties Explained video: th-cam.com/video/N69oIZO5Bj8/w-d-xo.html
@@MedSchoolInsiders I would say Ophthalmology is a surgical specialty, if ENT made the cut then I think optha should as well
Seems weird you included ENT but not ophtha , mind if you explain why ?
Cause to me their in the same ball park where they mix in both medical and surgical yet somehow one of them made it and the other didn’t
Nurse vs doctor
Anesthesiologist VS Surgeon
CRNA vs Anesthesiologist