Learn more about the MCG Internal Medicine Program here: www.augusta.edu/mcg/residents/internalmed/index.php and shout out to these awesome residents for showcasing what their day to day looks like (and for coming in on the weekend to film this lol)
Current MS1 right now. Mad respect for this guy for filming, editing, and maintaining this channel WHILE in medical school. You are awesome! Thanks for the videos. These are good introduction for each specialties.
It's amazing to see how much people wanna go into cardiothoracic surgery in the West, whereas residency spots are remaining vacant in India (as no one wants to take up CTVS)
“I’m just enjoying being here” Love the positive attitude. It helps when you have interns/students/residents to chart though 😂 Hospital medicine where it’s at though. So glad I went this route.
All the residents seem so cool 😊 and Dr. Summers seems so calm lol and Dr. Brown as well, very relaxing voice 😊 I wish them all the best in their career.
LOVED LOVED LOVED This segment. IM is the specialty that has intrigued me most as a pre-med student and I love getting to see the wide range of people in medicine. Amazing
Someone in these comments mentioned interviewing a missionary doctor. If you decide to do so, I would suggest Dr. Susan Nagele, who received the AMA Medal of Valor for medical work in Africa in 2012. She was a missionary in Africa from 1984 until 2020. One of the reasons she retired was due to her mother's needs. She currently lives in Urbana, IL. I do not know her personally, however I lived in Urbana for many years and became familiar with Dr. Nagele's story.
hey Andy awesome vid man. just wanna say your vids are aesthetically pleasing. the audio for this vid is top notch cool vibes. very informative video definitely gonna help a lot of med students. keep up the good work!
i envy them. they are having a great chance of work and trained by in a high quality hospital with a well orientated and great training system. I am a medical student from a poor country which is totally in chaotic and collapse by civil wars. Most of my senior doctors are doing civil disobedient movement and some are being detained by military for supporting democracy activist movements.
That sounds like a horrible situation. I'm sure you know that hospitals and physicians are specifically targeted in some on-going conflicts. Such war crimes are pervasive. I understand the moral dilemma but I've been around a long time and can assure you that the best option for you and for those whom you can help in the future is to get out. Save yourself and your future patients.
If you've made a video and I just haven't seen it, sorry about the question: What made you choose IM? Was it just what you matched into based on your match list? Or was that the only thing you wanted? Myself personally, I'm shooting for rural FM, (still a long ways off), but that's the end goal. Lollipops and Harp Lessons, I'm here for it.
In America it seems like jewelry, watches, rings, nail polish and more and it being no biggie. In Norway none of that is allowed working on a regular ward. Might be because MRSA is all over the US, and rarely in Norway? :P
No,, they live off campus almost always and work between 50-72 hours per week, sometimes more, usually 5-6 days per week, rarely seven days in a row, all depending on the rotation and call schedule. In my four months on internal medicine as an intern, my days alternated 7a-5p and 7a-7p six days per week for four months straight. Then I moved on to my specialty. In psychiatry, I worked between 50-60 hours per week, sometimes more, in the first two years. In the third year it is 45-50 hours per week with all weekends off.
@@HeavyProfessor Wow, thank you for writing all of this. That means a lot to me. It cleared up my mind from what I previously assumed. One more question I have is; your specialization is Psychiatry, so with that being said, although you are a Psychiatrist, on the side, are you able to study different specialties like Sports Medicine, Cardiology, Oncology, Neurology, etc. Is this allowed during residency?
@@waedjradi No, the acgme/boards provides requirements for each training program based on specialty. Those are followed strictly. Ie for psychiatry x number of weeks on inpatient, x weeks outpatient, x weeks consults, etc
YOU SEE WHAT IS THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT?, GASTROINTESTINE, THE INTESTINE, THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT HAS TWO WORDS, GAS AND INTESTINE, DO YOU SEE IT?
Ah. A woman. Is this your first female interviewee? Not that it matters much. It's just nice to see how much more gender equity there is in medicine these days. Yes, I'm just being slightly sentimental
Another thing doctors, will you please LEARN to teach your patients NOT to use JARGON when explaining things to your poor patients. I can't believe some of these dudes struggle to properly explain why the CLIENT 'has to stay a day more bec of your INR'. Consider the health literacy of the patient!!! Good grief. 😥🤣😩
Learn more about the MCG Internal Medicine Program here: www.augusta.edu/mcg/residents/internalmed/index.php
and shout out to these awesome residents for showcasing what their day to day looks like (and for coming in on the weekend to film this lol)
Subscribe this channel for Latest Medical Lectures.
Wow, I can't believe you have 125k subscribers now! I was around when you only had 20k. 😛😜
Haloo Dr
Hi doctor 💜
Current MS1 right now. Mad respect for this guy for filming, editing, and maintaining this channel WHILE in medical school. You are awesome! Thanks for the videos. These are good introduction for each specialties.
Hey Andy can u do 73 questions for a cardio thoracic surgeon
;)
Backing you up for that oneee
We need that this Q n A
^ I agree.
It's amazing to see how much people wanna go into cardiothoracic surgery in the West, whereas residency spots are remaining vacant in India (as no one wants to take up CTVS)
“I’m just enjoying being here”
Love the positive attitude. It helps when you have interns/students/residents to chart though 😂
Hospital medicine where it’s at though. So glad I went this route.
All the residents seem so cool 😊 and Dr. Summers seems so calm lol and Dr. Brown as well, very relaxing voice 😊 I wish them all the best in their career.
LOVED LOVED LOVED This segment. IM is the specialty that has intrigued me most as a pre-med student and I love getting to see the wide range of people in medicine. Amazing
these are so much better than vogue or actresses
🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲 Big up yardy. All I needed to see.
Facts
Thank you for this video. I feel so represented 🥺🥰
Someone in these comments mentioned interviewing a missionary doctor.
If you decide to do so, I would suggest Dr. Susan Nagele, who received the AMA Medal of Valor for medical work in Africa in 2012.
She was a missionary in Africa from 1984 until 2020. One of the reasons she retired was due to her mother's needs. She currently lives in Urbana, IL.
I do not know her personally, however I lived in Urbana for many years and became familiar with Dr. Nagele's story.
hey Andy awesome vid man. just wanna say your vids are aesthetically pleasing. the audio for this vid is top notch cool vibes. very informative video definitely gonna help a lot of med students. keep up the good work!
The first IM Resident, Jamaica 🇯🇲🇯🇲
Ross Univerity represent!
This was so amusing to watch! You handled being handed off to 4 different people so well! 😂
Hey Andy, could you do 73 questions with Interventional Cardiologist please ?
please do one for vascular surgery!!! please!!!
i envy them. they are having a great chance of work and trained by in a high quality hospital with a well orientated and great training system. I am a medical student from a poor country which is totally in chaotic and collapse by civil wars. Most of my senior doctors are doing civil disobedient movement and some are being detained by military for supporting democracy activist movements.
That sounds like a horrible situation. I'm sure you know that hospitals and physicians are specifically targeted in some on-going conflicts. Such war crimes are pervasive. I understand the moral dilemma but I've been around a long time and can assure you that the best option for you and for those whom you can help in the future is to get out. Save yourself and your future patients.
Can you do 73 questions with a neonatologist?:)
This was very creative! Loved it 🥰
Lovely work Andyyy !
Shout out from Kingston Jamaica 🎉
This is going to be interesting 😁😁
If you've made a video and I just haven't seen it, sorry about the question:
What made you choose IM? Was it just what you matched into based on your match list? Or was that the only thing you wanted?
Myself personally, I'm shooting for rural FM, (still a long ways off), but that's the end goal. Lollipops and Harp Lessons, I'm here for it.
Omg !!! We need more IM based videos
The most stressful rotation and most challenging aswell
absolutely
The first lady's Jamaican accent was leaking out 😂😂
Great video!
She’s beautiful 😍😍😍
Yay Rossies 😂❤️
And still struggling for everything.
💯💯
In America it seems like jewelry, watches, rings, nail polish and more and it being no biggie. In Norway none of that is allowed working on a regular ward. Might be because MRSA is all over the US, and rarely in Norway? :P
Sir, is human long term memory capacity unlimited?
take a shot every time chantelle says absolutely lol
During Internal Medicine, are physicians in training live on campus and are paid $60k, 80 hours a week, 6 days on, 1 day off?
No,, they live off campus almost always and work between 50-72 hours per week, sometimes more, usually 5-6 days per week, rarely seven days in a row, all depending on the rotation and call schedule.
In my four months on internal medicine as an intern, my days alternated 7a-5p and 7a-7p six days per week for four months straight. Then I moved on to my specialty.
In psychiatry, I worked between 50-60 hours per week, sometimes more, in the first two years. In the third year it is 45-50 hours per week with all weekends off.
@@HeavyProfessor Wow, thank you for writing all of this. That means a lot to me. It cleared up my mind from what I previously assumed.
One more question I have is; your specialization is Psychiatry, so with that being said, although you are a Psychiatrist, on the side, are you able to study different specialties like Sports Medicine, Cardiology, Oncology, Neurology, etc. Is this allowed during residency?
@@waedjradi No, the acgme/boards provides requirements for each training program based on specialty. Those are followed strictly. Ie for psychiatry x number of weeks on inpatient, x weeks outpatient, x weeks consults, etc
@@HeavyProfessor Yep, that makes total sense
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Hey Andy can you do 73 questions with me?
Who r u
@@Basedmursenary ask your mother
How much they pay you as a resident doctor? Med student here 🙋🏻♀️
50-60K
Why did you title the video day in the life rather than the usual 73 questions?
Body goals
Are these physicians single? Asking for a friend.
Take a shot every time she says absolutely 😂
DO YOU SEE THE CURVES IN THE BRAIN AND INTESTINE? WHAT IS A CURVE IN THE BRAIN AND INTESTINE
YOU SEE WHAT IS THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT?, GASTROINTESTINE, THE INTESTINE, THE GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT HAS TWO WORDS, GAS AND INTESTINE, DO YOU SEE IT?
U
Thicc resident
NAH SOMEONE SAID IT 💀💀
She's Jamaican so what do you expect😂😂
Fr
Gyat
I thought so😭
Can you do 73 questions of a missionary doctor?
I support this please.
Hey bro can you pls do a CRNA. I see a lot of medical school positions but none in the nursing side
Dr. Reinaldo is yummy! 😅😊
pause
Are diamond earrings among male residents acceptable dress codes now????
coffee
I want to marry a med doctor.
Be the medical doctor
How many times she said absolutely 🤣
chantelle couldnt take my eyes of her 😅
This "absolutely" was a pain in the ass throughout 😢
What a boring life
Yet, here you are. One could say your life must be boring to watch videos of other people's lives that you find boring. Bit weird.
You are not the one living it, how can You know?
Ah. A woman. Is this your first female interviewee? Not that it matters much. It's just nice to see how much more gender equity there is in medicine these days. Yes, I'm just being slightly sentimental
Thank u
Another thing doctors, will you please LEARN to teach your patients NOT to use JARGON when explaining things to your poor patients. I can't believe some of these dudes struggle to properly explain why the CLIENT 'has to stay a day more bec of your INR'. Consider the health literacy of the patient!!! Good grief. 😥🤣😩
very boring.
That's your opinion and that's fine. Maybe you'll find more fulfillment working on a garbage truck😁🤗🤭❤