How has the rotation experience helped solidify what you want to practice?Ěý
At this point in my third year, I’m ready to pursue emergency medicine as my career choice. I had not decided on a specialty going into third year but had experience in EMS in college, which I tried to not let be the sole guiding factor on my opinion on what field I wanted to go into. I tried to just let the rotations happen to me and be open to the possibilities. Two decisions to make after you’ve had a few rotations are if you want to be in a surgical specialty or not and if you want to be in the hospital or outpatient. After my surgery rotation and experiencing out vs inpatient medicine, I knew I wanted to work as part of a team, have the opportunity to do procedures as opposed to surgery, and work in the hospital as opposed to outside of it. I also reached out to students ahead of me and the emergency medicine advisor to talk over my decision-making process which was honestly some of the most helpful advice I’ve ever received.Ěý
Overall, I would summarize this as: Be open to the possibility that any rotation could really win you over. Don’t be afraid to explore different fields and to talk to people who are currently in them. Making a decision is one of the hardest things you’ll have to do, trust the process and when the time comes, the pieces will come together.Ěý
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What do you want people to know about what rotations are, how they work and why they are important?
Rotations for a third-year medical student are vitally important to our journey as young medical professionals. During the third year, we work with doctors in a variety of fields and learn how to do what they do, care for their patients, and try to assess and see if we ourselves should become part of that particular field. It is a transitionary period for students from the classroom to the clinic and serves as a steppingstone into the next part of our medical school experience.Ěý
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