1 / 15

Why Choose A Career in Pediatrics?

Why Choose A Career in Pediatrics?. Kishore Vellody, MD Assistant Professor of Pediatrics Children’s Hosp of Pittsburgh. Job Satisfaction.

alpha
Télécharger la présentation

Why Choose A Career in Pediatrics?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Why Choose A Career in Pediatrics? Kishore Vellody, MD Assistant Professor of Pediatrics Children’s Hosp of Pittsburgh

  2. Job Satisfaction • 96% of graduating pediatric residents who are in the job market for a general pediatric job state that they would choose Pediatrics again if they had to do it all over. • 2003 AAP Survey Data

  3. Job Satisfaction • Pediatricians rated higher satisfaction than internists in job, career, and specialty satisfaction • General pediatricians more satisfied than all other physicians regarding their relationship with patients and personal time • More likely to recommend their specialty to students seeking advice • Shugerman, et. al. 2001, Leigh et. al. 2002

  4. Job Opportunities • 80% of residents seeking a general practice position report obtaining their most desired position • Workforce shortages in a variety of pediatric subspecialties mean more job opportunities for graduates

  5. Job Flexibility • 26% of pediatricians (as opposed to 14% of all other specialties) have worked part time at some point in their career • Multiple types of jobs offered ranging from part-time to more demanding hours

  6. Serving the Underserved • Estimated that 48% of health care markets do not have a pediatrician • ~ 290,000 children live in markets without a pediatrician or family practitioner • 51 million people (1/5th) in the US lives in a rural area and only 10% of all U.S. physicians live there.

  7. Pediatrics Training • 3 year training (203 programs avail.) • Inpatient • Outpatient clinic • General and subspecialty exposure • NICU, PICU • ER

  8. Combined Peds/Adult Residency Training • Pediatrics/Internal Medicine (4 yrs) • Pediatrics/Derm (5 yrs) • Pediatrics/ER (5 yrs) • Pediatrics/Genetics (5 yrs) • Pediatrics/PM&R (5 yrs) • Pediatrics/Adult Psych/Peds Psych (5 yrs)

  9. What are the options? • General Pediatrics • Clinic Based • Community • Academic • Hospital Based • Community • Academic

  10. General Pediatrics - background • Focus on the physical, mental, social health of children from birth to 21 years. • Prevention, detection, and management of these issues • Major advocates for children (i.e. health/safety policies, education)

  11. Health supervision Anticipatory guidance Monitoring physical and psychosocial growth and development Diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic disorders Management of serious and life-threatening illnesses Referral of complex conditions Consultative partnerships Community based activities (i.e. sports, schools, etc) General Pediatrics - Scope

  12. Subspecialty Pediatrics • Most require 2-3 years of post-residency fellowships • Some require training in another discipline before becoming more focused on pediatrics such as: surgery, pathology, radiology • Pediatric neurology and psychiatry can be done with 2 years of general pediatric training followed by 2 years of fellowship

  13. Adolescent Medicine Allergy/Immunology Cardiology Clinical Genetics Critical Care Medicine Dermatology Developmental Emergency Medicine Endocrinology Gastroenterology Hematology/Oncology Infectious Disease Medical Toxicology Neonatology Nephrology Pulmonology Rheumatology Sports Medicine Subspecialty Pediatrics

  14. Research • Those in subspecialties or in academic environments can choose between more research intensive goals or patient care/clinical goals or a combination of the two

  15. Questions?

More Related