Hey guys, can anyone speak about what life is like as an intern and resident? Like hours worked/week, shift length, overtime, "stress", night shifts, opportunities to do research. Do you have to fight other student dr's to practice procedural skills? I know there's a massive thread on pagingdr but I thought it would be easier to ask here then sift through it.
Russ can probably speak better for all of this, but:
- Hours are usually 7-8am to 6pm 5 days a week, and most people do unpaid over-time on top of that
- Research opportunities vary (as per medical school), a lot has to do with who you know, why you know them, and being in the right place in the right time
- Usually you do the procedural skills for your patients, so you're not fighting with other doctors as they have their own patients. As for medical students, you doing the skill is more important than them doing it, but you can assign a cannula etc to the med students if you want.
Even though it's tedious, definitely worth reading the PD thread too, simply because there are heaps of perspectives there.
Also, how competitive is it to get into the melbourne hospitals? I assume its grades/cv/interview to get in like any other job, what are good things to have on the resume?
It's competitive. All of those things are relevant, plus good references. Anything that you would consider good, is good to have on a CV: good grades, research, volunteering, employment history, etc. Worth noting that different hospitals weigh things differently.
As for grades, if you're keen, look up InternZ scores on the PMCV website, that's the scoring used for Victoria for all of UoM, Monash and Deakin grads. Basically they chuck your med school scores into a normal distribution that has a median of 3.5 and a mean of 1.0 so that it's comparable among unis. How this is relevant? eg. RMH only starts to consider people with a InternZ score of > 3.5, Austin last year was rumoured to take a lowest InternZ score of 4.1, etc. So yes, if you want to get into big hospitals like RMH, Alfred, StV, Austin, and Monash, then you're going to to need to be at least in the better half of your med school. To make matters more complicated, some hospitals secretly prefer their own students, notable examples include StV and Monash. However if you're fine to go to Western, Eastern, Northern, Peninsula, and other health services, then you can probably afford to have a lower InternZ score (in comparison).
I wouldn't stress too much about it, you should enjoy your med school experience
