Med school uncensored The insider's guide to surviving admissions, exams, residency, and sleepless nights in the call room

Richard Beddingfield

Book - 2017

"An entertaining insider's guide to the good, the bad, and the ugly of med school--with everything pre-med and med students need to know, from day one, to maximize opportunities and avoid mistakes. Cardiothoracic anesthesiologist and recent med school grad Dr. Richard Beddingfield serves as an unofficial older brother for pre-med and incoming med students--dishing on all the stuff he would've wanted to know from the beginning in order to make the most of med school's opportunities, while staying sane through the gauntlets of applying to and succeeding at med school, residency, fellowship, and starting work as a new physician. With advice from additional recent Ivy League med school grads and top-tier hospital residents, ...this all-in-one guide is a must-have for everyone who dreams of becoming a doctor"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

610.71/Beddingfield
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 610.71/Beddingfield Due Nov 25, 2024
Subjects
Published
California : Ten Speed Press [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Richard Beddingfield (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
viii, 280 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780399579707
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Interview with a Pre-Med
  • Part I. The Premedical Years
  • 1. Why Go to Med School?: Time for Some Soul Searching
  • 2. Getting Into Med School: Easier Said Than Done
  • 3. Med School Flavors: M.D., D.O., and Caribbean
  • 4. Accepted: "It Costs How Much to Become a Doctor?"
  • Part II. Medical School
  • 5. Starting Med School: First Day of Summer Camp!
  • 6. Relationship Advice: Med School Years
  • 7. Stereotypes and Specialties: Jocks, Nine-to-Fivers, Geniuses, and Do-Gooders
  • 8. Gross Anatomy: Coffee and Formaldehyde
  • 9. Preclinical Years: Drinking from a Fire Hydrant
  • 10. Last Summer of Your Life: Research, Missions, Travel, or Booze?
  • 11. Usmle Step 1: Choose Your Career!
  • 12. Short White Coat: Now You're a Real Doctor (Almost)
  • 13. Dual-Degree Programs: Outlets for Overachievers
  • 14. Medicine Wards: Rounding, Admissions, and Discharge Summaries
  • 15. Surgery and the OR: Life as a Sleepless Human Retractor
  • 16. Usm Le Step 2 CK: "But I Really Want to Be a Dermatologist!"
  • 17. Usmle Step 2 CS: "It Costs How Much to Prove I Speak English?"
  • 18. Applying to Residency: Black Friday for the Airline Industry
  • 19. Match Day: Beginning of the End
  • 20. Graduation: Now You're Really a Doctor (Almost)
  • Part III. Residency and Fellowship
  • 21. Tricky Terminology: The Confusing Language of Residency
  • 22. Starting Intern Year: Shit Just Got Real
  • 23. Usmle Step 3: Nobody Cares-Really
  • 24. Starting Residency: "Now This Is Really What I Want to Do! Sort of..."
  • 25. Relationship Advice: Residency and Beyond
  • 26. Sleep and Hobbies: Apparently Not Required for Life
  • 27. Jolly Good Fellows: "Yes, Ma'am; May I Have Another?"
  • Part IV. Medical Practice
  • 28. Get a Job: Light at the End of the Tunnel
  • 29. Doctor Beware: Scams, Shams, and Shady Groups
  • 30. Specialty Boards: "It Costs How Much to Prove I Know Stuff?"
  • 31. Starting Your First Rea/Job: "Where's My Attending?"
  • 32. Your First Attending Paycheck: "What Do I Do with This?"
  • 33. Continuing Medical Education: "It Costs How Much to Prove I Still Know Stuff?"
  • 34. When Things Go Wrong: Guilt, Sleepless Nights, and Malpractice Attorneys
  • 35. Occupational Hazard: Dealing with Death on a Daily Basis
  • Epilogue: Many Grains of Salt
  • About the Author
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Author Beddingfield is in his first year of practice as a cardiothoracic anesthesiologist. Given that he is a new practitioner and from the Midwest, his accounts of his experiences in medical school, residency, and fellowship are geared more toward individuals interested in becoming anesthesiologists and who want to receive an education and train in the Midwest. The book is easy reading (one can read it an hour), and the author shares many of his own stories, along with other physicians' anecdotes. He also provides ideas and experiences from many new graduates. The well-written epilogue discusses ethical matters and end-of-life issues that physicians encounter on a daily basis. Beddingfield offers some sound advice regarding the medical school admission process, and also provides good information about various exams and milestones experienced in medical school and residency. Several lists of recommendations to follow, such as when one is in the surgical rotation, are offered. Overall, the author is very personable in his writing style; he even offers readers an opportunity to contact him via his website. Summing Up: Recommended. All readers. --Sheila Carey Grossman, Fairfield University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.

INTRODUCTION  Interview with a Pre-Med  It was a typical January evening in Minnesota. The air was biting cold, with temperatures well below freezing. The sun had set hours before I was done with work on my ICU rotation. I left the warmth of the hospital to meet a pre-med student at a nearby coffee shop to talk about my experiences in medical school. I've long since forgotten his name, but I remember he was a young undergrad at the University of Minnesota, studying biology. He was bright-eyed and a bit nervous about meeting a real live medical student, that being me.  On a whim, I had responded a few weeks prior to an email from a pre-med interest group asking for senior medical students to meet with randomly assigned undergrads to impart to them our vast array of experiences and wisdom gained in the four torturous years of becoming a doctor. As I knocked the snow off my boots, I thought I'd rather be home cracking open a beer than bracing myself for an hour of questions from an overly eager pre-med.  He immediately recognized me by the Minnesota sweatshirt I'd told him I would be wearing. It felt a bit like a blind date, though not one I would have been excited about. He was armed with a small notepad and pen. I paid for his coffee, but in retrospect I'm not sure why. Being a senior medical student, I had by that time accumulated massive amounts of student debt, so I'm sure he was better off financially than I was.  We picked a table in the corner, and he immediately recited a well-rehearsed introduction. He asked how far along I was in my studies, whether I had chosen my specialty, and if I knew yet where I would be going for residency. I answered his questions and kind of got into the whole thing. I felt like a B-list celebrity, interviewed by this eager young student listening intently to my every word, recording it in his black notepad. I hammed it up a bit, waxing poetic about my circuitous decision to become a doctor, how I'd selected my medical school, what led me to my chosen specialty. After a glowing self-introduction, I opened the floor to my interviewer. "So, what do you want to know about medical school? I'm just a few months from graduation, so I can tell you all about it, from the first week of gross anatomy to the final rotations and residency match." I was ready to share my treasure trove of knowledge and experience. I tried to imagine his most pressing questions. He might ask about the workload in medical school, the material covered in our preclinical years, the diverse and eye-opening experiences of rotating as a student in the wards or operating rooms. He began: "So here's what I really want to know about medical school: What MCAT score guarantees that I'll get in?" Are you freakin' kidding me? I couldn't believe it. I was in my final year of med school, just months from graduation. I had been through it all! I had dissected a full cadaver, taken countless exams on everything from pathology to physiology, memorized every muscle and bone in the body, admitted homicidal patients in the county psychiatric ward, scrubbed in for twelve-hour heart surgeries. I had countless interesting experiences and myriad advice to impart, and this was his question? I gave him some BS answer, and he continued: "What topic did you choose for your admissions essay? Are there any topics that will help someone get in?" And the next question: "Right now I'm volunteering at a hospital. Do you think helping at a research lab will help my chances of getting in, or do you think volunteering is enough?" On and on he went. Every question was some variation of how do I get into medical school?  Finally, I interrupted the young student: "Look, I get it. You're focused on getting into medical school right now. But don't you have any questions about what med school is actually like? Aren't you curious about what awaits you once you start medical school, choose your specialty, apply to residency, and become a real, practicing physician? How do you know being a doctor is actually a good fit for you? What other career options have you considered?" He paused and looked at me like a deer in headlights. Finally, he responded: "Yeah, I do wonder about those things. But to be honest . . . I don't even know where to begin. Getting into medical school is such a tall hurdle that it's tough to see past that sometimes. It's hard enough to figure out what I need to do to get in--much less what happens after that. I don't know any doctors personally, and real information about what it's really like to become a doctor is hard to come by." He paused again, cleared his throat, and asked me, "So . . . what is med school really like?"  And that's when the idea to write this book first hit me. There were enough books, internet forums, and seminars about how to get into medical school. Pre-meds have been devouring such information for decades, even more so as getting into medical school becomes increasingly competitive. I decided to instead write a book that frankly describes what it's like getting into medical school--and beyond. I would write an exposé about being a medical student, a resident, a fellow, and a brand-new attending physician--all from the perspective of someone fresh out of the process. They say you should always know your audience when writing. This book is written first and foremost for those brave souls immersed in the continuum of medical education. This is for pre-meds who are still trying to decide if med school is for them, as well as those already in the process of applying to medical schools, anxious to learn more about what awaits them. This is also for the young medical student just starting his or her journey, a guide for what to expect and how to navigate the sometimes murky waters of med school and residency. Finally, this is for the seasoned medical student, resident, fellow, or fresh attending who wants to commiserate or borrow experiences and advice from someone else in their shoes. ( Attending is one term for a physician who is done with training--a bona fide doctor, with all the status and remuneration expected with that position.)  Of course, all readers are welcome. I hope this book will be enlightening to friends and family of young doctors-to-be, nostalgic for practicing or retired physicians, or at least entertaining to the curious general public. To ensure a variety of opinions and viewpoints, I've included stories and advice from over a dozen other young physicians from medical schools and residency programs throughout the country. Most contributors were gracious enough to provide their real names; others (whose pseudonyms appear in quotation marks) preferred to remain anonymous. Excerpted from Med School Uncensored: The Insider's Guide to Becoming a Doctor by Richard Beddingfield All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.