Anesthesiology is my favorite! - Love treating people in an acute care vs chronic care. The ability to see your interventions work in real time is gratifying. I really enjoy that it includes the cerebral nature of internal with the addition of procedures skills. Plus the work-life balance is unmatched and burn out is low. Really considering doing interventional pain afterwards, but I do worry about the consequences of working under radiation for long periods of time. Would love to hear your thoughts on this Dr. Chellini, since the vast majority of your work is under radiation?
Emergency medicine for the win! But I'm EMS right now while in school so I'm a little biased. I also think I might like critical care or maybe neurology.
As a recent medical school graduate, I agree of rural family medicine. During my rotations, I have done a 2 rotations in rural health and it was one of the best rotation I ever had. Because of this experience, my interest in rural medicine became my top priority. It’s sad many med schools don’t offer rotation in rural medicine and I thank God that I had the opportunity to do it because gives a different perceptive on patient care in a different environment and setting.
@@CassandraBarthelemy Not yet since I am currently studying for my STEP exams( I am an IMG). My goal is to enter rural surgery since it was one of my rural rotations. It can be challenging at times but I know I will enter in.
I LOVE that you mentioned having a long-term, trusting, caring, close relationship with patients and "that is how medicine should be." You are SO right, and so many doctors and dentists/dental specialists do not have that mindset. I'm currently going through some major pain/issues with my mouth requiring many people to be involved, and it's been a very difficult journey to find people who care enough to follow up with me on a long-term basis and are invested in getting me better.
Loved your thoughts on critical care. I was admitted to the ICU in March for Covid pneumonia with O2 sats at 55%. I was intubated for 11 days and was knocking on deaths door with little hope for survival. Blood transfusions, emergency surgery, a PE, and the list goes on. By the grace of God and OBViOUSLY the amazing brains and hands of medical professionals- I survived. I spent a total of 51 days in the hospital bouncing from floor to floor as various complications arose but I made it home and I am slowly getting back to normal life. All that to say- I received the most amazing care from my critical care staff. I cannot thank them enough or stop singing their praises. Not only their medical expertise but their hearts and compassion were invaluable. ❤️
Bruh rural family medicine docs are just built different. They’ll be your pediatrician, OB/Gyn, dermatologist, gastroenterologist, endocrinologist, podiatrist, general surgeon and probably your large animal veterinarian in a pinch if you ask nicely.
Dr. Cellini is such a mood. I just finished 15 months of cancer treatment. Eight rounds of chemo, 2 surgeries in 24 hours, 25 rounds of radiation and just finished the chemo pill. Doctors are my heroes. How is what you do different from my Oncology Radiologist? Do you do all types of Radiology diagnosis? Transplant surgery would be interesting. I bet that is quite long training.
Transplant surgery has some of the worst if not the worst hours in medicine, there’s a reason why they never fill all of their spots every year. When most general surgeons think a field is too rough that’s really saying something. I do agree that for the right person it could be an incredibly interesting and rewarding career.
what's your thought on PMR? The only week of my IM rotation that I really enjoyed was my ICU block!! the rest of IM was not for me haha. I also really liked the ED and how quick pace and life impacting it was...
In Perú we have this thing called SERUM, which is rural medicine. It's mandatory for all doctors after their internship and lasts about a year. They can send you to a close-by town or they can send you to a remote little town deep into the mountains, depends on your grades and your exam score (theres an exam). You basically become the town's doctor and an ace of all trades.
100% rural fm would be the best field if one could teleport from work to a big city at the end of every day magically. It was by far my favorite rotation during third year!
YES I love what you said about rural family medicine! And yeah it surprised me since you do seem like a city guy. Otherwise, it's so true - how medicine should be.
I’m glad you mentioned critical care. Last year my husband had a stomach bleed that puzzled some of the doctors as he has a gastric bypass. He was on a trauma unit. They first did 2 colonoscopies as they thought the colon was bleeding but he was still losing blood. There was a resident there that explained every procedure to me and what the next steps would be. By the next day he lost a lot of blood and thus kind doctor phoned me at 1 am to ask if I could get down to the hospital. He was in shock, swore at the doctors, thought he was at a vets office. The doctors were very kind, ended up doing an esophagus procedure that pinpointed a bleeding ulcer he didn’t know he had. That doctor was so good. It was the end of his rotation, told me he was going to specialize in opthamology, but he would’ve been a superb family doctor or internal physician as he was so good with people. He probably chose that as the hours are much better and less stressful, but we need these types of doctors in trauma units as they’re. Rey comforting to patients and their families.
Currently on a rotation in a rural family medicine practice, and I agree, it's a really unique experience! My supervising MD has been running his clinic for 30+ years, and he has cared for his patients & their entire families for decades. His patients trust him, so much so that 80% of the patients are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 (which is not typical in the rural South).
I’m not a doctor ( and I don’t play one on tv either, lol!) , but rather a recently retired nurse of 45 years. In my long career, I basically worked every specialty except OB/Peds, ER and psych. My two favorites are oncology and orthopedics. One is emotionally challenging, and the other is physically challenging. Each had its benefits. Oncology was my first love though, and very rewarding. I formed many special bonds with a number of my long term patients and their families that has sustained me over the years. Very challenging fields, but also very rewarding!
Also I’m in Australia and there was a news story tonight that organ donation is down because we have all our internal boarders closed (due to covid) so less flights. It is so sad. Also I’m over in Western Australia and the nearest other city to us is about 4 hours flight so we don’t get many donations. My husbands best friend died aged 24 16 years ago this December and he donated 7 organs to adults and young kids. We like to know his death was to help someone else. I’m an organ donor but with ehlers danlos and liver/pancreas (spincter of odi dysfunction) and gastroperisis I don’t know that much would be viable.
Hi Dr. Cellini!! What do you think about Gastroenterology? Or anything related to the skeletal system?? I attend medical programs for high schoolers interested in the medical field and I notice that o gravitate more towards the digestive and skeletal system. What is your opinion on those?
The ancillary staff in an ICU is like the special forces. The best of the best in literally everything. The best nurses are ICU nurses, the best RTs round in the ICU, the best technicians and nursing assistants, phlebotomists, chaplains, etc all work in the ICU.
I've been leaning towards family practice, particularly rural, for a long time--specifically for those reasons. Been having some doubts as I get closer to finishing my undergrad, so thanks for reminding me!
∆ Dear Person That is reading this, we don't know each other but I wish you all the best in life ♥ don't blame yourself,accept things and move forward, Your smile is precious and key for happy life :-) 🙏
That’s so fascinating about IR docs and urologists working together closely I never knew that. Also I was definitely surprised when you said rural family medicine but I can see your point about it. I always learn something new when I watch your vids Dr. C, it’s pretty cool
I had a nearly fatal PE when I was 30 (APA/APS, PAI-1 4G/5G, Elev Lipo-A, EDS (found out after w an AMAZING peds hemo/onco that finds me fascinating)) and years later I think about the Dr's that saved me atleast every week. Did a FABULOUS job hiding the scar in my neck! I don't remember much from ICU days, thank God I had like 6 or 7 tubes in my neck alone. But I remember the paramedic thought I was drunk cuz I wet myself and collapsed outside my apartment by a dumpster (ha!) and kept yelling at me in the ambulance and the Dr screaming in the ER "no, she's having a PE"...I couldn't even sign the consent...the Dr helped me put an 'X'. He and the other Dr's and a couple of the nurses will always be in my prayers!!! ❤ 🧡 💛 💚 💙 💜
If you didn't like Urology because of its long surgeries, then you definitely won't like Transplant Surgery. As an anesthesiologist, I've done many liver transplants that typically take 10-17 hours. That's not a typo. Kidney transplants can take around 3-5 hours. Heart and lung transplants take several hours each. Furthermore, these surgeries can occur at any time of day, such as 2am! Most of the time, you can't schedule transplant surgeries like you could with most other types of surgeries. It's whenever the organ procurement is available. The lifestyle of a transplant surgeon really sucks. You can't pay me enough to do that. Just my 2 cents. Video idea for you: One Legacy. The organization that arranges or "organ"izes (pun intended) organ procurement. I suspect there are some deep dark secrets that this organization is hiding. There's something fishy going on here. It's only a matter of time that "60 Minutes" does an expose on this.
What about interventional Cardiology? I'm surprised you didn't mention it in this video. It has a lot of similarities with interventional radiology doesn't it?
I'm not a doctor, but if I was, I'd want to be a general practitioner in some Podunk little town and work 9 to 5 Monday to Friday and let specialists deal with people who need to be hospitalized.
A few years ago I had a percutaneous nephrolithotomy for removal of a huge staghorn kidney stone. I woke up two days later in ICU because the urologist (months out of residency) somehow lacerated my kidney. I owe my life to the critical care docs and nurses and to the IR doc that kept going in to cauterize the bleeds. Thank you Dr. Cellini for doing what you do.
I’m so thankful for critical care physicians! My husband had Covid March 2020 and was in the ICU for over a month, vented for most of that time! The drs and nurses were awesome! My fav speciality is cardiology - my son is a cardiology fellow 😉
I'm not a doctor so I'm just going by the personalities of the specialties Int. Rad. sounds interesting. I'd love to observe. You seem like good sense of humor and wouldn't throw instruments across the room (always an added plus) anesthesiology, ER, family practice, urology, ob/gyn, plasic surg, gen surg, ortho. If you need a fun relaxing channel join is at The Den for some chit chat, dancing, a drink and no drama. Everyone welcome. I love your channel
What’s your thought on anesthesiologist? I always found that field fascinating and wondered if you have talked about it in any of your videos? I’m a new to the channel and enjoy ur vids, keep up good work Doc Hollywood 😊
I live in Denver but wold love to have a rural doctor. I have an autoimmune condition that has manifested in many ways and have to see a lot of specialists …. So exhausting. I’d love one town doc with his or her little black bag like on little house on the prairie lol 😂
Family Medicine!!! I am a CMA in a Neurology clinic but started my career in Family Medicine and I miss it all of the time....I love having the babies all the up to the Grandparents!!! It is these pts I will forever have a relationship with!!!😊
I never heard of an interventional radiologist until a couple months ago when my granddaughter had a pheo on one of her adrenal glands. (She has MEN2A as does her mom, me and my dad.) The IR team performed a cryo-ablation on it. She just had follow-up labs and metanephrines were undetectable. So as for now it's also my favorite specialty.
My family doctor was the first female doctor to be a rural family doctor in Gaspésie (eastern Quebec), in a small town. She did that at the beginning of her career.
Transplant surgery sounds cool. My only worry so far right now is how efficient are doctors in calling an organ donor brain dead. I mean if I were a donor, I would first want to make sure that I will be revived to the fullest of my abilities by my doctor before harvesting my organs. So its kinda gives me the idea of almost literally killing the patient with the surgery. Which kinda feels off.
Nice list, Dr. Cellini! My list: IM to Critical Care (minus pulmonary) IM to H&P Rural Family Medicine (full-spectrum; exceptionally interesting residency locations i.e. frontiers in Alaska and Wyoming) CAP
I think the transplant unit would be a awesome team to work with. ICU although fascinating I think Docs get burned out quick. I think u picked the rt field for u. A little bit of everything 😊👏
Dr. C. How can you form any kind of relationship with your pts? Aren't you the guy they call in as a consult, or to help position a tube, for example? Will you ever have an office with patient appts?
Current 3rd year student, my top 3 are urology, family med, and IR. I’ve met a few people with similar lists but nobody puts them together when I tell them. Very interesting
Love you content! You’re just very good at Vlogging! Hope the new job is going well and you’re settling in well! Need a tunneled cuffed catheter for PLEX Wish you were in LI and you could do this boring procedure for me ‘😂🤣
As always..another GREAT video! I think the transplant dr would be really interesting and non stop adrenaline! You guys must have made a ton of videos before moving…lol
Hello Dr. Cellini. I enjoy these videos when you provide insight into the medical field. What are your opinions on the Radiology Assistant (RRA) field? Are RRA properly utilized in the work place? Or is it still too new of a field that RRAs are not fully utilized in the medical field? Would love your opinion on the matter.
"And it's like nothing ever happened" Well, the high risk surgery, then meds to suppress the immune system to reduce the risk of rejection and rejection in itself aren't nothing but I see what you mean ^^
Did you think I was going to say these!? 😬. What are your favorite specialties? 👇🏼👇🏼
My favorite medical specialty probably has to be plastic surgery, specifically in the reconstructive branch.
I think gastroenterology is my favorite and the one I want to do most. I also love allergy/immunology, cardiology and orthopedics
Anesthesiology is my favorite! - Love treating people in an acute care vs chronic care. The ability to see your interventions work in real time is gratifying. I really enjoy that it includes the cerebral nature of internal with the addition of procedures skills. Plus the work-life balance is unmatched and burn out is low. Really considering doing interventional pain afterwards, but I do worry about the consequences of working under radiation for long periods of time. Would love to hear your thoughts on this Dr. Chellini, since the vast majority of your work is under radiation?
Emergency medicine for the win! But I'm EMS right now while in school so I'm a little biased. I also think I might like critical care or maybe neurology.
Neurosurgery here! Such a fascinating and developing field as well
As a recent medical school graduate, I agree of rural family medicine. During my rotations, I have done a 2 rotations in rural health and it was one of the best rotation I ever had. Because of this experience, my interest in rural medicine became my top priority. It’s sad many med schools don’t offer rotation in rural medicine and I thank God that I had the opportunity to do it because gives a different perceptive on patient care in a different environment and setting.
I agree it was awesome
Is that what you matched into?
@@CassandraBarthelemy Not yet since I am currently studying for my STEP exams( I am an IMG). My goal is to enter rural surgery since it was one of my rural rotations. It can be challenging at times but I know I will enter in.
FAVORITE medical specialties for Dr. Cellini :
- IR
- Urology
- Rural family medicine
- Critical care medicine
- Trasplant surgery
I LOVE that you mentioned having a long-term, trusting, caring, close relationship with patients and "that is how medicine should be." You are SO right, and so many doctors and dentists/dental specialists do not have that mindset. I'm currently going through some major pain/issues with my mouth requiring many people to be involved, and it's been a very difficult journey to find people who care enough to follow up with me on a long-term basis and are invested in getting me better.
👍🏼👍🏼
Nurses are like this too…
@@sara215 I'm a nurse, I really hope that's not the case and your experiences! Sorry to hear that!
Loved your thoughts on critical care. I was admitted to the ICU in March for Covid pneumonia with O2 sats at 55%. I was intubated for 11 days and was knocking on deaths door with little hope for survival. Blood transfusions, emergency surgery, a PE, and the list goes on. By the grace of God and OBViOUSLY the amazing brains and hands of medical professionals- I survived. I spent a total of 51 days in the hospital bouncing from floor to floor as various complications arose but I made it home and I am slowly getting back to normal life. All that to say- I received the most amazing care from my critical care staff. I cannot thank them enough or stop singing their praises. Not only their medical expertise but their hearts and compassion were invaluable. ❤️
Bruh rural family medicine docs are just built different. They’ll be your pediatrician, OB/Gyn, dermatologist, gastroenterologist, endocrinologist, podiatrist, general surgeon and probably your large animal veterinarian in a pinch if you ask nicely.
Surgery is so fascinating! Plastic surgery, cardio thoracic surgery, neurosurgery and so much more. It’s literally sci-fi.
Surgery definitely seems fascinating but also high tension
That’s what I’m trying to get into; I love watching it too it’s so intriguing.
Hey Dr. Cellini, have you listened to the Dr. Death podcast? I figured you could make a video about the neurosurgeon in question (Dr. Chris Duntsch).
Hmm I haven’t…I’ll look into it
Oh great idea
I literally just watched this yesterday! I watched the drama series and the documentary; it was so interesting.
Dr. Cellini is such a mood. I just finished 15 months of cancer treatment. Eight rounds of chemo, 2 surgeries in 24 hours, 25 rounds of radiation and just finished the chemo pill. Doctors are my heroes. How is what you do different from my Oncology Radiologist? Do you do all types of Radiology diagnosis? Transplant surgery would be interesting. I bet that is quite long training.
Transplant surgery has some of the worst if not the worst hours in medicine, there’s a reason why they never fill all of their spots every year. When most general surgeons think a field is too rough that’s really saying something. I do agree that for the right person it could be an incredibly interesting and rewarding career.
what's your thought on PMR?
The only week of my IM rotation that I really enjoyed was my ICU block!! the rest of IM was not for me haha.
I also really liked the ED and how quick pace and life impacting it was...
Michael's favorite thing to do is take lots of coffee breaks 🤣
100%
Anesthesiologist?
In Perú we have this thing called SERUM, which is rural medicine. It's mandatory for all doctors after their internship and lasts about a year. They can send you to a close-by town or they can send you to a remote little town deep into the mountains, depends on your grades and your exam score (theres an exam). You basically become the town's doctor and an ace of all trades.
Great video Dr. Cellini! You should ask for (and react to) youtube comment roasts for a future video again!!!
100%!
Rural Family Medicine.... Dr. Joel Fleishman from Northern Exposure comes to mind . :-)
100% rural fm would be the best field if one could teleport from work to a big city at the end of every day magically. It was by far my favorite rotation during third year!
Or Apparate like in Harry Potter. 😂😂
YES I love what you said about rural family medicine! And yeah it surprised me since you do seem like a city guy. Otherwise, it's so true - how medicine should be.
I’m glad you mentioned critical care. Last year my husband had a stomach bleed that puzzled some of the doctors as he has a gastric bypass. He was on a trauma unit. They first did 2 colonoscopies as they thought the colon was bleeding but he was still losing blood. There was a resident there that explained every procedure to me and what the next steps would be. By the next day he lost a lot of blood and thus kind doctor phoned me at 1 am to ask if I could get down to the hospital. He was in shock, swore at the doctors, thought he was at a vets office. The doctors were very kind, ended up doing an esophagus procedure that pinpointed a bleeding ulcer he didn’t know he had. That doctor was so good. It was the end of his rotation, told me he was going to specialize in opthamology, but he would’ve been a superb family doctor or internal physician as he was so good with people. He probably chose that as the hours are much better and less stressful, but we need these types of doctors in trauma units as they’re. Rey comforting to patients and their families.
Funny, my dad is a urologist and also said if he didn't do Uro, he would have liked IR. I guess it's true!
Dr. Cellini your videos are always amazing 👍. Thank you for becoming an amazing RUclipsr and an amazing doctor!! 🙌
You are too nice
Currently on a rotation in a rural family medicine practice, and I agree, it's a really unique experience! My supervising MD has been running his clinic for 30+ years, and he has cared for his patients & their entire families for decades. His patients trust him, so much so that 80% of the patients are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 (which is not typical in the rural South).
also from the south, and that’s amazing🙌
I’m not a doctor ( and I don’t play one on tv either, lol!) , but rather a recently retired nurse of 45 years. In my long career, I basically worked every specialty except OB/Peds, ER and psych. My two favorites are oncology and orthopedics. One is emotionally challenging, and the other is physically challenging. Each had its benefits. Oncology was my first love though, and very rewarding. I formed many special bonds with a number of my long term patients and their families that has sustained me over the years. Very challenging fields, but also very rewarding!
Awesome Video Dr. Cellini!
(haven't even watched it yet but I know that its a banger!)
Facts you know he’s about to drop a quality video
Haha but of course!
Did you ever get to do a rotation in PM&R? Also it would be interesting to see you do a series of videos talking to doctors in other specialties!
me remembering you liked anesthesia until it came to intubation so i was mentally hoping it was one of your top 5 lol
Also I’m in Australia and there was a news story tonight that organ donation is down because we have all our internal boarders closed (due to covid) so less flights. It is so sad. Also I’m over in Western Australia and the nearest other city to us is about 4 hours flight so we don’t get many donations.
My husbands best friend died aged 24 16 years ago this December and he donated 7 organs to adults and young kids. We like to know his death was to help someone else. I’m an organ donor but with ehlers danlos and liver/pancreas (spincter of odi dysfunction) and gastroperisis I don’t know that much would be viable.
Hi Dr. Cellini!! What do you think about Gastroenterology? Or anything related to the skeletal system?? I attend medical programs for high schoolers interested in the medical field and I notice that o gravitate more towards the digestive and skeletal system. What is your opinion on those?
Oh my lord!!!! I absolutely love urologic surgery
The ancillary staff in an ICU is like the special forces. The best of the best in literally everything. The best nurses are ICU nurses, the best RTs round in the ICU, the best technicians and nursing assistants, phlebotomists, chaplains, etc all work in the ICU.
My favorite specialty is perinatologists/neonatologists. I think it would be very stressful trying to calm mothers and parents
I've been leaning towards family practice, particularly rural, for a long time--specifically for those reasons. Been having some doubts as I get closer to finishing my undergrad, so thanks for reminding me!
∆ Dear Person That is reading this, we don't know each other but I wish you all the best in life ♥ don't blame yourself,accept things and move forward, Your smile is precious and key for happy life :-) 🙏
Do you see yourself working with your wife in the future? I'm thinking she could transfer her skills in the IR field.
What do you think about sports medicine?
That’s so fascinating about IR docs and urologists working together closely I never knew that. Also I was definitely surprised when you said rural family medicine but I can see your point about it. I always learn something new when I watch your vids Dr. C, it’s pretty cool
Hoping to go into Pulm/Critical Care after IM residency !
For a second I thought the coffee break and iced coffee was some sort of product placement, but it was not.
I had a nearly fatal PE when I was 30 (APA/APS, PAI-1 4G/5G, Elev Lipo-A, EDS (found out after w an AMAZING peds hemo/onco that finds me fascinating)) and years later I think about the Dr's that saved me atleast every week. Did a FABULOUS job hiding the scar in my neck! I don't remember much from ICU days, thank God I had like 6 or 7 tubes in my neck alone. But I remember the paramedic thought I was drunk cuz I wet myself and collapsed outside my apartment by a dumpster (ha!) and kept yelling at me in the ambulance and the Dr screaming in the ER "no, she's having a PE"...I couldn't even sign the consent...the Dr helped me put an 'X'. He and the other Dr's and a couple of the nurses will always be in my prayers!!! ❤ 🧡 💛 💚 💙 💜
Person with spina bifida here and I just have to say one thing about urology... C ME 2 P LOL!
I thought you were going to say cardiology 😂, that’s what I plan on going into
If you didn't like Urology because of its long surgeries, then you definitely won't like Transplant Surgery. As an anesthesiologist, I've done many liver transplants that typically take 10-17 hours. That's not a typo. Kidney transplants can take around 3-5 hours. Heart and lung transplants take several hours each. Furthermore, these surgeries can occur at any time of day, such as 2am! Most of the time, you can't schedule transplant surgeries like you could with most other types of surgeries. It's whenever the organ procurement is available. The lifestyle of a transplant surgeon really sucks. You can't pay me enough to do that. Just my 2 cents.
Video idea for you: One Legacy. The organization that arranges or "organ"izes (pun intended) organ procurement. I suspect there are some deep dark secrets that this organization is hiding. There's something fishy going on here. It's only a matter of time that "60 Minutes" does an expose on this.
What about interventional Cardiology? I'm surprised you didn't mention it in this video. It has a lot of similarities with interventional radiology doesn't it?
I'm not a doctor, but if I was, I'd want to be a general practitioner in some Podunk little town and work 9 to 5 Monday to Friday and let specialists deal with people who need to be hospitalized.
Fourth! Lol! I'm excited for this one!
Growing up in a small town in 60s our family physician even delivered peoples babies.
Hi Dr. Cellini, I love watching your videos!
I love making them!
Interesting that you like Critical Care but do not like EM.
I tried to get back to the picture of your veterinarian brother but I don't know how.
A few years ago I had a percutaneous nephrolithotomy for removal of a huge staghorn kidney stone. I woke up two days later in ICU because the urologist (months out of residency) somehow lacerated my kidney. I owe my life to the critical care docs and nurses and to the IR doc that kept going in to cauterize the bleeds. Thank you Dr. Cellini for doing what you do.
Love urology… been around it my whole life with how I was born
Least work, highest demand and high paid doctors?
I’m so thankful for critical care physicians! My husband had Covid March 2020 and was in the ICU for over a month, vented for most of that time! The drs and nurses were awesome!
My fav speciality is cardiology - my son is a cardiology fellow 😉
I'm not a doctor so I'm just going by the personalities of the specialties Int. Rad. sounds interesting. I'd love to observe. You seem like good sense of humor and wouldn't throw instruments across the room (always an added plus) anesthesiology, ER, family practice, urology, ob/gyn, plasic surg, gen surg, ortho. If you need a fun relaxing channel join is at The Den for some chit chat, dancing, a drink and no drama. Everyone welcome. I love your channel
I want to become an ER doctor or radiologist.
Urology NO, Rural Family Medicine. NO. Critical Care Medicine YES. Transplant Surgery YES
@dr.cellini where in the hell do you film this?
What’s your thought on anesthesiologist? I always found that field fascinating and wondered if you have talked about it in any of your videos? I’m a new to the channel and enjoy ur vids, keep up good work Doc Hollywood 😊
I live in Denver but wold love to have a rural doctor. I have an autoimmune condition that has manifested in many ways and have to see a lot of specialists …. So exhausting. I’d love one town doc with his or her little black bag like on little house on the prairie lol 😂
Might be bias but anesthesiology.
Family Medicine!!! I am a CMA in a Neurology clinic but started my career in Family Medicine and I miss it all of the time....I love having the babies all the up to the Grandparents!!! It is these pts I will forever have a relationship with!!!😊
I never heard of an interventional radiologist until a couple months ago when my granddaughter had a pheo on one of her adrenal glands. (She has MEN2A as does her mom, me and my dad.) The IR team performed a cryo-ablation on it. She just had follow-up labs and metanephrines were undetectable. So as for now it's also my favorite specialty.
My family doctor was the first female doctor to be a rural family doctor in Gaspésie (eastern Quebec), in a small town. She did that at the beginning of her career.
Shout out to my peeps in critical care woooooot. Them folks are the GOATS!!!
Transplant surgery sounds cool. My only worry so far right now is how efficient are doctors in calling an organ donor brain dead. I mean if I were a donor, I would first want to make sure that I will be revived to the fullest of my abilities by my doctor before harvesting my organs.
So its kinda gives me the idea of almost literally killing the patient with the surgery. Which kinda feels off.
can you dial back on the constant jump cuts with the random zoom-ins? It's almost nauseating
Omg I love your videos. I decided recently I want to go to med school to be a psychiatrist.
AWESOME VID thank you !! 🤍
What about Neurology ? Or Psychiatry ? Interested in those.
Your thoughts please.
Northern Exposure 2.0
Love the video as all way.😊
GREAT VIDEO MAN !!! I WILL PROVABLY DO SOMETHING SIMIALR SOON ! ER HAS BEEN CRAZY LATELY AND COVID IS BACK ;(
Medicine is basic day labor.
Surprised diagnostic rads wasnt your number 2 since you're boarded in it
I am curious - what is your opinion on Psychiatry? (currently in my Psych rotation)
I know its in high demand right now
Nice list, Dr. Cellini!
My list:
IM to Critical Care (minus pulmonary)
IM to H&P
Rural Family Medicine (full-spectrum; exceptionally interesting residency locations i.e. frontiers in Alaska and Wyoming)
CAP
“Procuring”
2051 hey my nama is dr. Chellini jr. am officialy intervation radiologist
Have you ever thought about intervention cardiology?
I think the transplant unit would be a awesome team to work with. ICU although fascinating I think Docs get burned out quick. I think u picked the rt field for u. A little bit of everything 😊👏
Dr. C. How can you form any kind of relationship with your pts? Aren't you the guy they call in as a consult, or to help position a tube, for example? Will you ever have an office with patient appts?
Now I really like you!
Current 3rd year student, my top 3 are urology, family med, and IR. I’ve met a few people with similar lists but nobody puts them together when I tell them. Very interesting
Love your videos ❤️❤️
Love you content! You’re just very good at Vlogging! Hope the new job is going well and you’re settling in well! Need a tunneled cuffed catheter for PLEX Wish you were in LI and you could do this boring procedure for me ‘😂🤣
cowboy with a catheter
Donating those organs
What is your opinion on infectious disease as a specialty
As always..another GREAT video! I think the transplant dr would be really interesting and non stop adrenaline! You guys must have made a ton of videos before moving…lol
Borrowing organs 🤣
Ever think of doing a live Q&A about IR? Love the vids, you're such an inspiration! #GoTeamIR
After those 10 minutes were over I was, "Damn, that's all?" lol never heard of these so I was intrigued listening to all of them^^
Hello Dr. Cellini. I enjoy these videos when you provide insight into the medical field. What are your opinions on the Radiology Assistant (RRA) field? Are RRA properly utilized in the work place? Or is it still too new of a field that RRAs are not fully utilized in the medical field? Would love your opinion on the matter.
I could see you being an emergency medicine physician, so critical care definitely makes sense.
Hey I was expecting OB-GYN too
Loved this video.
Medicine is amazing. Science is amazing. Brilliant channel.
"And it's like nothing ever happened"
Well, the high risk surgery, then meds to suppress the immune system to reduce the risk of rejection and rejection in itself aren't nothing but I see what you mean ^^
Why dont you split up your video for better user experience?
Nice touch with the Super Hornet...
Also was gung-ho uro, now going into DR, hoping to do ESIR!
Yay rural family medicine!
5:28 Now I know you are insane.