The increase in publications is not necessarily a good thing. It's actively harming science by saturating the field with garbage papers. Instead of asking "what can we do to push the boundary of knowledge," labs are asking "what can we do to publish our next paper?" The PhD students in my undergrad biology lab were there for 7 years and only published 1-2 primary research papers in addition to a couple review papers. The articles that they published were truly powerful and raised new points and inquiries about the fields that they were studying. Compare that to most labs in med school where they publish at least once a year by doing things like knocking down or overexpressing proteins in a known pathway (and their hypothesis is pretty much always true because its a freakin' pathway so its obvious whats gonna happen).
The whole research game med students play is a shitshow, coming from a second year med student. The vast majority of us are in this profession to become clinicians not scientists
I know I’m not the first one that’s asked this but I speak for a lot of people when I say that we’d love to see a video talking about the bread and butter of each specialty . Maybe a longer form video, or a series. Love the content!
Im still a little concerned about the job market for doctors. This video does make me feel a little better about doctors not being replaced by AI anytime soon, i still feel like that doctors are closer and closer to being replaced by NP and PAs with how much hospitals have been trying to replace them. And i was on a psych rotation and asked the staff there about psychiatrists being replaced by APRNs in the future and they agreed that it is likely
Eventually enough lawsuits will mount from NP/PA mistakes that it will make more business sense to go back to a more physician oriented healthcare field. It’s just gonna take a lot of deaths and permanent mistakes for it to happen.
Yeah, I work at the hospital now while being premed and you definitely think about that. With all of the technological advances going on, I’m wondering if it’ll be more NP’s and PA’s being involved while the doctors move on to a different role like research. I hope not though.
Midlevel creeping says otherwise dear Dr.Kevin , Nurses out here calling themselves NP Cardiologist, NP Intensivist, Nurse Anaesthesiologist , . Patients at this point dont know if they're visited by an MD or an NP , Our country is doomed by these midlevels not AI
@@zeyadmohamed6315 because people who complain about being doctors are making 200k+ and have amazing job security. They probably thought it would be easy getting into their specific residency or making millions but all things considered being a physician is still a good career choice. Now take computer science which everyone was considering and now it barely pays and has terrible job security. People spoke very highly of it and look what happened. Guess what will happen to medicine the exact opposite.
finally i was restless waiting for this video thnks 😍Btw could u do a video of how international students from IGCSE could become a doctor in the USA 😍😃
Great I loved this I want a video about the future of radiology and the doctor in the field of radiology and I also I want a video about the available medical specialties such as radiology, surgery, dentistry, neurology, psychiatry, etc.
unfortunately i believe a lot of applications to competitive residencies are chalked with sub par and uncorrelated abstracts just to hit a quota of studies, there is a noticeable gain from being published in a reputable journal, however, that often is less impactful
I work in AI. I agree, medicine is the way. That being said, surgical specialties like neurosurgery will definitely be aided HARD in two decades. The robots will be far more superior than a human. But someone need to be there to open and close. The other surgical specialties will take more time, probably about 3-4 decades. But in terms of intelligence, by the end of 2026 ai will be more knowledgeable in any vector imaginable than all humans convined. To the point where advancements in robotics can't even be speculated, or in any science. 😂 Heck, the world might end before surgeons only have to open and close.😂 Pathology is DEFINITELY gone in 3 years (more likely will be the easiest specialty to practice because an AI will do everything better faster), and rad is a close second. I can go as far as to say that path could be completely replaced TODAY but companies right now are invested into core AI (general) development until the margins tighten. When that happens... applications of AI will multiply by the second to medicine and that's when we'll see severe changes in work/life balance of MD's. Will they be replaced? NO. Will their work/life balance improve? YES. Probably by several percentage points. That being said, money won't mean anything in 2-3 decades. Not when robots are doing everything. So careers will be valuable based on perception and value to society and not salary. And guess what, medicine wins again.
The increase in publications is not necessarily a good thing. It's actively harming science by saturating the field with garbage papers. Instead of asking "what can we do to push the boundary of knowledge," labs are asking "what can we do to publish our next paper?"
The PhD students in my undergrad biology lab were there for 7 years and only published 1-2 primary research papers in addition to a couple review papers. The articles that they published were truly powerful and raised new points and inquiries about the fields that they were studying. Compare that to most labs in med school where they publish at least once a year by doing things like knocking down or overexpressing proteins in a known pathway (and their hypothesis is pretty much always true because its a freakin' pathway so its obvious whats gonna happen).
Absolutely true 💯
The whole research game med students play is a shitshow, coming from a second year med student. The vast majority of us are in this profession to become clinicians not scientists
This video had me thinking residents were going to get pay raises😭
We can only hope.
I know I’m not the first one that’s asked this but I speak for a lot of people when I say that we’d love to see a video talking about the bread and butter of each specialty . Maybe a longer form video, or a series. Love the content!
Im still a little concerned about the job market for doctors. This video does make me feel a little better about doctors not being replaced by AI anytime soon, i still feel like that doctors are closer and closer to being replaced by NP and PAs with how much hospitals have been trying to replace them. And i was on a psych rotation and asked the staff there about psychiatrists being replaced by APRNs in the future and they agreed that it is likely
Eventually enough lawsuits will mount from NP/PA mistakes that it will make more business sense to go back to a more physician oriented healthcare field. It’s just gonna take a lot of deaths and permanent mistakes for it to happen.
Yeah, I work at the hospital now while being premed and you definitely think about that. With all of the technological advances going on, I’m wondering if it’ll be more NP’s and PA’s being involved while the doctors move on to a different role like research. I hope not though.
Midlevel creeping says otherwise dear Dr.Kevin , Nurses out here calling themselves NP Cardiologist, NP Intensivist, Nurse Anaesthesiologist , . Patients at this point dont know if they're visited by an MD or an NP , Our country is doomed by these midlevels not AI
One thing I’ve learned is that the more people say a feild is bad the better it is, and the MORE people say a feild is good the worse it actually is.
I would never choose a field anyway just because it is popular or pays a lot of money, but only because I'd be interested in the field.
@@laaaliiiluuu Interest isn't always the best reason to follow a certain path. You need to weigh the benefits and cons.
Why is that the case, why is it that the more people say a field is bad the better it is?
@@zeyadmohamed6315 because people who complain about being doctors are making 200k+ and have amazing job security. They probably thought it would be easy getting into their specific residency or making millions but all things considered being a physician is still a good career choice. Now take computer science which everyone was considering and now it barely pays and has terrible job security. People spoke very highly of it and look what happened. Guess what will happen to medicine the exact opposite.
@@zeyadmohamed6315 that’s just my theory *
Mom wake up Jevin Kubbal dropped another video 🗣️💯
If they quitting they were never “called”. You gotta be called to this or else you’ll never last…
Definitely would like to see a video on new medical technology
Yup
Honestly, I think a video with a title like this deserves more than just 9 minutes.
I would love to see a video on advancements in Medical Technology !
Wow! I never thought this way❤ nice vedio Dr. Jubbal
2:14 absolutely!
finally i was restless waiting for this video thnks 😍Btw could u do a video of how international students from IGCSE could become a doctor in the USA 😍😃
Great I loved this I want a video about the future of radiology and the doctor in the field of radiology and I also I want a video about the available medical specialties such as radiology, surgery, dentistry, neurology, psychiatry, etc.
He has them
Yes, please make a video on the latest advances in the medical field. Thanks
wait so the research you do to be competitive for residency doesn't exactly have to be related to that specific specialty?
unfortunately i believe a lot of applications to competitive residencies are chalked with sub par and uncorrelated abstracts just to hit a quota of studies, there is a noticeable gain from being published in a reputable journal, however, that often is less impactful
I work in AI. I agree, medicine is the way. That being said, surgical specialties like neurosurgery will definitely be aided HARD in two decades. The robots will be far more superior than a human. But someone need to be there to open and close. The other surgical specialties will take more time, probably about 3-4 decades. But in terms of intelligence, by the end of 2026 ai will be more knowledgeable in any vector imaginable than all humans convined. To the point where advancements in robotics can't even be speculated, or in any science. 😂 Heck, the world might end before surgeons only have to open and close.😂 Pathology is DEFINITELY gone in 3 years (more likely will be the easiest specialty to practice because an AI will do everything better faster), and rad is a close second. I can go as far as to say that path could be completely replaced TODAY but companies right now are invested into core AI (general) development until the margins tighten. When that happens... applications of AI will multiply by the second to medicine and that's when we'll see severe changes in work/life balance of MD's. Will they be replaced? NO. Will their work/life balance improve? YES. Probably by several percentage points.
That being said, money won't mean anything in 2-3 decades. Not when robots are doing everything. So careers will be valuable based on perception and value to society and not salary. And guess what, medicine wins again.
can't wait for the radiology AI vid!
Coming in a few weeks!
0:07 you and Ali Abdaal started this trend 😂
Possible to leak out medical school curriculum to general public?
Future doctor incoming 😂😂
Said by Kevin who's not even practicing at the moment 🙄
Why should doctors risk their lives and the lives of their families just to help very small amount of people?
Oops.
7th comment!
Can i be pinned