Have I told you about the observership program? It’s one of the greatest strengths of Queen’s medicine, and it basically involves contacting a doctor in the community and requesting to shadow him/her at work. The idea is for junior medical students to gain experiences that will inspire their learning, guide their thoughts about speciality choices, and give them ideas for what to do with their clinical clerkships in senior years. Hopefully I’ll be doing a number of these observerships, and I’ll do my best to keep track of them here! Not only would I love to tell you about them, but I’d like a storage spot for my thoughts. Then when it comes time to make difficult speciality decisions, I’ll be able to review my first impressions.
Yesterday and today I had the incredible opportunity of doing an observership in General Surgery. I’m still a little flabbergasted that they let me do it! The surgeon who took me on was amazing – he was so willing to teach and he put up with all of my questions, which must have sounded pretty stupid to him.
On Friday night I was in for a laparoscopic appendectomy. In case you’ve never heard of laparoscopic surgery, it consists of making a very small incision in the abdomen and inserting a laparoscope to view the inside of the peritoneal cavity. The surgery is then performed using the scope’s feed on a TV-screen for guidance, and by passing tools through other equally-small incisions. I’ll be posting more about laparoscopy soon!
This morning I was in for a colostomy, which is a procedure to connect the large bowel to the abdominal wall. Essentially an opening (a stoma) is created from the gut to the outside of the body so that faeces pass out into a collection bag instead of through the rest of the colon. This procedure was done “open”, as compared to laparoscopically, so I was able to compare the two! This afternoon I was in for a cholecystectomy, which is removal of the gallbladder.
All three surgeries were amazing!! The two today were especially interesting because I was allowed to scrub in to the sterile field, and even to lend a hand once or twice to retract or cut a stitch. The OR was somewhat surreal, and there were a lot of surprises. Once again, I’ll play a horrible trick and save those surprises for an upcoming post because I want to use this one to concentrate on reviewing the observership.
General surgery has a lot going for it. It involves a lot of different procedures in a lot of different areas of the body. In short, there’s a lot of variety – also, in the patients that you treat. A general surgeon’s patients can range from young and otherwise healthy people who need an appendix out, to those who are critically ill. Often general surgeons head-up trauma cases because multiple organ systems are affected. Additionally, general surgery is versatile. Even smaller towns need surgeons so it’s a very portable speciality.
As a speciality, it’s also not very likely to become irrelevant any time soon. That may seem to be given, but it’s not unheard of for newly discovered technologies to suddenly put medical specialities out of business. The best example may turn out to be the marked decrease in jobs for cardiothoracic surgery after advancements in interventional cardiology.
Personally, I felt that one of the best aspects of general surgery (actually this applies to all surgical specialities) seemed to be the emphasis on teamwork. The OR team that I observed were so well-tuned with each-other, and they were having a great time together.
Of course, getting into general surgery means going through a particularly difficult residency. The residents that I spoke to today were intentional to point out that the general surgery residents always work the most of everyone in the OR. Plus, being on call can make for a difficult lifestyle. The surgeon who I was observing commented that “if you want a 9-to-5, this is far from it”. That’s particularly true if you practice in a small town where you might be the only surgeon around.
More details about the OR visit forthcoming, and hopefully more reports from observerships!