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3: What is Neurology : A General Neurologist's Story

3: What is Neurology : A General Neurologist's Story

FromSpecialty Stories


3: What is Neurology : A General Neurologist's Story

FromSpecialty Stories

ratings:
Length:
27 minutes
Released:
Dec 28, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Session 03 In this episode, Ryan talks with a neurologist, Dr. Allison Gray, as they discuss all things about neurology. Notice that Ryan follows a standard regimen of questions in his episodes so you can compare each of the answers to hopefully help enlighten you in choosing your residency. Allison is working as a neurologist at a large medical group in a community setting in Colorado. Here are the highlights of the conversation with Allison: When Allison knew she wanted to pursue Neurology: Getting fascinated at neuroscience Her father being a neuropsychologist Why community versus academic: Being drawn more to clinical practice Types of patients: Of all ages - teenagers and up (Pediatric Neurology is a separate specialty with a separate board of accreditation) Fairly healthy and dealing with chronic conditions like migraine People very debilitated by acute neurologic problem like stroke or chronic problem like ALS A typical day in the life of Allison: 8am - 5pm Sees 10 patients a day (This is a lot for neurologists since they have long examinations and they take long histories.) Breakdown of her 10 patients- 6 new consults 1 procedure (ex. EMG) 4 follow up visits On work-life balance: Where she works has emphasis on creating work-life balance Flexibility in setting her schedule Work-life balance is a challenge for her being a mom Getting amazing support from staff who let her do physician work because they take as much administrative stuff off her plate as possible Traits that lead to being a good neurologist: Being cerebral (focusing not just on what the problem is and the best treatment, but where the problem is) Interest in solving a puzzle Being able to dive into action quickly (ex. stroke patient) What makes a competitive applicant for neurology: Getting better grades Getting good board scores Depends on geography (Neurology as a whole is not as competitive as orthopedic surgery or radiology) Good shadowing experience Find a way to participate in a neurology elective Is matching competitive for Neurology? Middle range - It depends on geography and whether you're going to a very competitive program at a big name institution. Do you see any bias between MDs and DOs for Neurology? None that she's aware of. What is residency like for Neurology? Her residency was volume-heavy and she was seeing a great deal of patients Great in-patient heavy doing a lot of in-patient rotations in stroke and acute neurology and Neuro-ICU Out-patient time depends on the academic institution Residency is 4 years (1 year of Internal Medicine and 3 years of Neurology residency) What she wished she knew going into Neurology? Appreciating that Neurology was sad sometimes considering there is still no good treatments for Alzheimer's, Dementia, ALS, etc. So you see people facing very devastating illnesses that are chronic, debilitating, and even deathly. Also, Neurology is acutely devastating sometimes. It really takes guts to see someone suffering. However, Neurology has a great promise and they're seeing wonderful new therapies coming out. Compared to 20 years ago, now there's a huge difference in the way they treat things like MS and genetic disorders. What do you wish primary care providers knew about Neurology? Neurologists are here to help and they're happy to help primary care physicians and they can always ask for help. Specialties she works the closest with: Neurosurgeons Orthopedic surgery Spine clinic Physical therapy Special opportunities outside of clinical medicine for Neurology: Working with industries to discover new treatments What Allison likes most about being a Neurologist: A wide variety of problems in a day She enjoys helping people and their families in difficult situations. What she likes least about being a Neurologist: The difficulty in not being able to offer someone something to fix a problem Would she have chosen Neurology if she had to do it all over again? Yes, Allison thinks the brain is the most fas
Released:
Dec 28, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Specialty Stories is a podcast to help premed and medical students choose a career. What would you do if you started your career and realized that it wasn't what you expected? Specialty Stories will talk to physicians and residency program directors from every specialty to help you make the most informed decision possible. Check out our others shows at MededMedia.com