Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you find a doctor to shadow?
Best path is to ask people you know. Can send blind emails if you really don't know any doctors but that's a tough road.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid shadowed an orthopedic surgeon in HS and loved it. Got to watch a couple of achilles repairs and and some knee surgeries and loved it. Went pre-med with a biochemistry/econ major and as they shadowed in college saw the deeper realities and bureaucracy they have to deal with decided it was not their cup of tea. Next stop law school. Moral of the story is make sure they shadow multiple specialties and just not the cool ones. Match Day could end up brutal otherwise and then it's a lot of years to be something you're not passionate about.
Should have shadowed a lawyer, lol.
-- a lawyer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ms DS shadowed an oral surgeon who is the father of one of his longtime friends and got to watch everything during 12 procedures. 🥴This was over Xmas break as a college freshman though. After one year of pre-med he decided to take a different path.
I should also say that the surgeon was pretty upfront with DS about the path he took, how his practice is structured, work/life balance, etc.
Your son should shadow a psychiatrist. My work/life balance is great. I can get a job in just about any city in the US. And 17 years into it, every patient I see is still interesting.
Anonymous wrote:As a patient, I would not want a high schooler in the examination room.
Anonymous wrote:As a patient, I would not want a high schooler in the examination room.
Anonymous wrote:As a patient, I would not want a high schooler in the examination room.
Anonymous wrote:As a patient, I would not want a high schooler in the examination room.
Anonymous wrote:My kid shadowed an orthopedic surgeon in HS and loved it. Got to watch a couple of achilles repairs and and some knee surgeries and loved it. Went pre-med with a biochemistry/econ major and as they shadowed in college saw the deeper realities and bureaucracy they have to deal with decided it was not their cup of tea. Next stop law school. Moral of the story is make sure they shadow multiple specialties and just not the cool ones. Match Day could end up brutal otherwise and then it's a lot of years to be something you're not passionate about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ms DS shadowed an oral surgeon who is the father of one of his longtime friends and got to watch everything during 12 procedures. 🥴This was over Xmas break as a college freshman though. After one year of pre-med he decided to take a different path.
I should also say that the surgeon was pretty upfront with DS about the path he took, how his practice is structured, work/life balance, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you find a doctor to shadow?
Best path is to ask people you know. Can send blind emails if you really don't know any doctors but that's a tough road.
Anonymous wrote:How do you find a doctor to shadow?