00:00:08
[Music]
00:00:14
yeah hi
00:00:16
all i'm dr melody salmona obgyn board
00:00:18
certified
00:00:20
welcome to our office women's health
00:00:21
institute um i was going to talk to you
00:00:23
about a day in the life of an ob gyn
00:00:25
give you all the details that i go
00:00:27
through on a daily life and maybe some
00:00:28
tidbits of what happens outside the
00:00:30
office
00:00:30
so follow me into our entrance so here
00:00:35
unfortunately things are a little bit
00:00:36
different obviously with our coven
00:00:38
and so we want to temperature check all
00:00:39
of our patients as well make sure
00:00:41
everybody's wearing a mask
00:00:42
i normally wear a mask i promise but
00:00:44
follow me in and then we'll tell you how
00:00:46
everything goes throughout the day
00:00:48
so in here all of our patients again
00:00:50
after they've been temperature checked
00:00:51
and wearing their masks are going to
00:00:52
just check in
00:00:53
and we'll let them come back here with
00:00:54
one of our medical assistants
00:00:56
so that they can get their temperature
00:00:57
checked as well as their weight
00:00:59
um and any other pertinent vital signs
00:01:01
before we get into the office all right
00:01:03
so follow me again
00:01:05
patients are then going to continue down
00:01:07
this hallway we usually have them follow
00:01:10
into one of
00:01:10
at least at our office one of our
00:01:12
references where they are going to get
00:01:13
their weight taken
00:01:15
as well as their height
00:01:18
and given that we do work down with our
00:01:21
genito urinary system we make sure we
00:01:23
get some urine samples for any of their
00:01:25
potential problems that are either
00:01:27
obstetric or gynecologic
00:01:28
and they'll leave those zombies here
00:01:30
with us as well
00:01:34
okay so once that's been all of that
00:01:36
pre-check done the patients will follow
00:01:38
again our medical assistant
00:01:40
and either do a couple of things they
00:01:43
can either get an
00:01:43
obstetric ultrasound or a gynecologic
00:01:46
ultrasound which we have here in the
00:01:47
office
00:01:48
they might come in for their laboratory
00:01:50
work first and then once that's done
00:01:52
they'll follow me into one of these um
00:01:53
patient
00:01:54
rooms where we can actually talk about
00:01:55
the visit that they're here for
00:02:01
this is where i do my work in this
00:02:03
office i actually have two offices this
00:02:05
is one of them
00:02:06
these are my three patient rooms that i
00:02:08
have rooms one room two
00:02:09
and room three so in here if you want to
00:02:12
come on in
00:02:13
patients will initially sit down here um
00:02:16
and then we'll do our interview process
00:02:18
as well so i'll take a seat here
00:02:21
most of the time i bring in my computer
00:02:23
so that we can go over their history
00:02:24
make sure it's all nice and pertinent
00:02:26
and ask for any new updates
00:02:28
that are necessary so remember we have a
00:02:30
different type of population here it is
00:02:32
all women
00:02:33
but we see both gynecologic patients as
00:02:35
well as obstetric patients
00:02:37
and all ages i have patients from ages
00:02:40
10
00:02:40
all the way to ages of 80s 90s and they
00:02:43
all have different variable symptoms or
00:02:45
problems that they'd like to get
00:02:46
evaluated and then obstetrically we're
00:02:49
confirming patients and we're also
00:02:50
seeing them all the way through their
00:02:51
postpartum visit so
00:02:53
lots of good variety in the office that
00:02:56
really helps you just kind of
00:02:57
help women in general and all of their
00:02:59
different needs throughout
00:03:01
their year okay
00:03:08
so once we're done with that we will
00:03:10
review all of their results if they're
00:03:12
needed
00:03:12
and as they're done with our visit we've
00:03:14
answered all their questions
00:03:16
i'm giving them specific vaccines or
00:03:19
injections that are required
00:03:20
they're done with their visit for the
00:03:21
day and they go right back out to the
00:03:23
exit
00:03:24
where they will make any future
00:03:25
appointments with us um
00:03:27
or any follow-up appointments that they
00:03:29
might need and that's just right back
00:03:30
where it came from
00:03:32
so that was a quick overview of how the
00:03:33
day goes but now we're going to actually
00:03:35
go down and get into all of the details
00:03:36
the nitty gritty stuff the really cool
00:03:38
information that you want to know
00:03:40
about how it is to work in a day in the
00:03:41
life of an ob gyn
00:03:43
let's go
00:03:48
hi i'm dr melody samura obgyn board
00:03:51
certified
00:03:51
and today we're just going to be going
00:03:53
into a further detail on what it's like
00:03:55
to be an ob gyn what you can expect and
00:03:58
hopefully answer some questions for
00:04:00
you to make you come into my field
00:04:02
because it's awesome
00:04:04
so a typical day for an ob gyn i'm going
00:04:06
to tell you is very variable from day to
00:04:08
day because obstetrics itself is really
00:04:11
relying on the patients particularly the
00:04:12
ob
00:04:13
part so what we do and i'm currently in
00:04:16
private practice there are some other
00:04:18
types of practice you know you could be
00:04:19
just working in the hospital and be a
00:04:21
hospitalist and only do obstetrics
00:04:23
you could be part of a major um group
00:04:25
like a kaiser and sort of have to follow
00:04:27
their roles but for me we're private
00:04:28
practice
00:04:29
so i'll give you the details on that set
00:04:31
so i do surgery on monday mornings
00:04:34
so monday mornings i am up at around
00:04:37
5 30 to 6 because my surgeries are gonna
00:04:39
start at about seven o'clock
00:04:41
i do them all morning on monday and i
00:04:43
usually am able to do about
00:04:45
three to four surgeries depending on the
00:04:47
type of surgery
00:04:48
the surgeries can include anything like
00:04:50
a hysteroscopy
00:04:51
which are those small little minor
00:04:53
surgeries where we go inside the uterus
00:04:55
and see if there's any abnormalities
00:04:56
there for what particular problem the
00:04:58
patient came in
00:04:59
or something as significant in major
00:05:01
surgery as a hysterectomy
00:05:03
and i do robotic surgery personally we
00:05:05
could always talk about that in detail
00:05:07
if you had any questions on that further
00:05:09
and that's my monday morning in the
00:05:11
afternoon i follow that up with
00:05:13
office visits so then i come back to
00:05:15
this office here and see patients for
00:05:17
the rest of the afternoon
00:05:19
i will get some lunch in there so don't
00:05:20
worry about that
00:05:22
other days um thursday sorry tuesday
00:05:25
through friday are definitely going to
00:05:27
be our regular full day
00:05:28
ob visits as well as gynecologic visits
00:05:31
so all in the office
00:05:32
as i had mentioned earlier i actually
00:05:34
have two offices
00:05:35
so it depends what part of the city i'm
00:05:37
at the different kind of patient
00:05:38
populations but in general we're seeing
00:05:40
again obstetrics and gynecologic
00:05:42
patients
00:05:43
our office opens at 8 30 in the morning
00:05:45
and we are done by about 5
00:05:47
30. i do have a long day which we get to
00:05:50
see patients who unfortunately like
00:05:52
myself work all day and still need to
00:05:54
see a physician so we extend our hours
00:05:56
to about 7 pm for those patients as well
00:05:59
and those office visits are usually
00:06:01
going to be placed in 10-minute slots
00:06:03
but we definitely take a little bit
00:06:04
longer to see our patients so we are
00:06:06
sometimes running behind and that's the
00:06:08
nature of being a physician in the
00:06:09
office trying to get to see as many
00:06:11
people
00:06:12
and help as many people as you can and
00:06:14
you always want to make sure that you
00:06:15
pay attention to your patients you're
00:06:16
giving them that full undivided
00:06:18
attention
00:06:19
now obstetrics we have a call system
00:06:22
in my group and so sometimes i'm doing
00:06:26
24 hour calls in the hospital and so for
00:06:29
those days
00:06:30
i will show up at 7 am and i will not
00:06:33
leave until 7 a.m the next day
00:06:35
we live in the hospital so we're there
00:06:37
for our patients
00:06:38
24 hours and for any emergency needed in
00:06:41
them
00:06:41
er consults from the hospital list of
00:06:44
patients that have already been admitted
00:06:46
that have
00:06:47
gynecologic or even they find out that
00:06:49
they're pregnant when they came in for a
00:06:50
procedure
00:06:52
as well as our laboring patients and
00:06:53
those that have any
00:06:55
other issues emergently in the obstetric
00:06:57
fashion
00:06:58
so that is a general overview of all of
00:07:00
the days
00:07:01
again surgery office visits as well as
00:07:05
obstetric and gynecology calls in the
00:07:07
hospital
00:07:08
so i started school i went to undergrad
00:07:10
at yale university and then
00:07:12
i did a post-baccalaureate program at
00:07:14
georgetown and followed up with
00:07:16
being at georgetown medical school so i
00:07:19
love surgery i've always been very
00:07:20
hands-on even since i was little
00:07:22
i would always help my dad my dad
00:07:24
actually has some experience in
00:07:26
working as a butcher so he would always
00:07:28
be able to tell me about the anatomy of
00:07:30
certain animals and i was really into
00:07:32
that so i knew i wanted to do something
00:07:33
surgical
00:07:35
but once you go into medical school you
00:07:37
know the first two years
00:07:38
books tests all that fun stuff you
00:07:40
finally get to get into the hospital on
00:07:42
your last third and fourth year
00:07:44
and that's where you get to experience
00:07:45
all of the different sub-specialties and
00:07:47
see which ones you think
00:07:49
are most fitted for you obstetrics and
00:07:51
gynecology or my ob
00:07:53
gyn rotation was at the very end and
00:07:56
i previously before getting there was
00:07:59
pretty into maybe some plastic surgery
00:08:01
because again as i mentioned i
00:08:03
really like surgery but then i did
00:08:04
obstetrics and i delivered a baby all by
00:08:07
myself and that is one of the coolest
00:08:09
things you can ever imagine
00:08:11
that you are the person that helped this
00:08:13
couple
00:08:14
get their baby i usually tell patients
00:08:16
like there is some other human in this
00:08:18
room and i'm gonna find it and it's just
00:08:20
delivering a baby making everybody happy
00:08:22
it's a great
00:08:23
great um specialty to be in
00:08:26
particularly for me i feel like it's a
00:08:29
very happy um
00:08:30
specialty we deal with only women and
00:08:33
most of the time they're there to kind
00:08:34
of
00:08:35
ask you about problems that they're
00:08:36
having and solving those problems
00:08:38
whether they might be severe abnormal
00:08:40
bleeding
00:08:41
really terrible periods pelvic pain
00:08:45
cancers such as breast cancers
00:08:46
gynecologic cancers we are the ones that
00:08:49
find those and then refer them
00:08:50
to the subspecialties and so whenever we
00:08:54
are able to one find these things or
00:08:56
resolve their issues they're very very
00:08:58
grateful and so again it's just such a
00:09:00
happy place to be in
00:09:02
i will say yes we have some downs
00:09:04
particularly in our obstetric
00:09:06
um specialty but when those things are
00:09:09
bad you
00:09:10
again are also there for your patient
00:09:12
and they really appreciate that
00:09:14
and you have such a better relationship
00:09:16
when they come back for their
00:09:17
subsequent pregnancy and everything else
00:09:19
it works out very well
00:09:21
so those are the reasons the patient
00:09:22
population the variability
00:09:25
of what you can see as i mentioned all
00:09:27
of the gynecology stuff the obstetric
00:09:29
stuff
00:09:30
there's lots of different degrees of
00:09:33
intensity in ob
00:09:35
where patients may have to manage
00:09:36
diabetes their thyroid problems
00:09:39
their obesity their asthma even their
00:09:41
mental illness so you really have to
00:09:43
take in
00:09:44
everything that you learned in medical
00:09:46
school and apply it
00:09:47
and i think it makes you such a good
00:09:49
specialty where you feel like you're
00:09:50
doing an
00:09:51
overview and taking care of women for
00:09:53
everything that they might need
00:09:55
and it makes it a really satisfying day
00:09:57
okay so you probably are all wondering
00:09:59
how long does it take you to be an ob
00:10:01
gyn how do you get to the finish line so
00:10:04
as always you have to start with your
00:10:06
undergraduate career so that's your
00:10:08
four-year undergrad
00:10:09
and then you will apply to medical
00:10:10
school medical school is also four years
00:10:13
once you're done with medical school
00:10:16
then you will apply to residency
00:10:18
particularly depending on your
00:10:21
particular um
00:10:22
residency choice you'll either have a
00:10:24
two-year residency
00:10:26
a three-year residency four five maybe
00:10:28
even up to seven years
00:10:30
for ob it is a four-year residency
00:10:34
in that residency you are obviously
00:10:36
taking those
00:10:37
information and general knowledge that
00:10:39
you got about physical exam
00:10:41
um in the ob gyn field when you were in
00:10:44
medical school and then taking that even
00:10:46
a couple steps further
00:10:48
and four years of being on the floor
00:10:51
delivering babies
00:10:52
learning how to start with your
00:10:53
surgeries being able to pre-op a patient
00:10:56
suggesting the right type of surgery or
00:10:58
maybe just medical management so really
00:11:00
honing in on those details that are
00:11:02
going to make you a very good ob gyn
00:11:05
and by the time you're at your fourth
00:11:06
year you are definitely very well versed
00:11:09
in the different types of surgeries that
00:11:11
there are
00:11:11
the nice thing about gynecology is we
00:11:13
have a lot of minimally invasive surgery
00:11:15
as well as open surgery in particular
00:11:18
in my field and what i learned in
00:11:20
residency was robotic surgery which is
00:11:22
really cool surgery where you're able to
00:11:25
have a patient kind of stay away
00:11:27
on that part of the console and you're
00:11:28
in a little your own little console just
00:11:31
making sure you're using all of your
00:11:32
instruments and doing the most minimally
00:11:34
invasive surgery possible
00:11:35
that takes years of practice and
00:11:37
learning and you get all of that in
00:11:38
residency
00:11:40
in addition i am a general ob gyn
00:11:43
ob gyn specialty also has subspecialties
00:11:47
we have maternal fetal medicine for
00:11:49
those of you who are really
00:11:50
interested in really only doing
00:11:52
obstetrics and those high-risk
00:11:53
pregnancies
00:11:54
um things such as again managing
00:11:57
diabetes
00:11:58
hypertension preeclampsia really
00:12:01
rare things maybe something like an
00:12:03
eller stand list patient or a patient
00:12:05
that actually has a cardiac
00:12:06
dysfunction that needs to be assessed on
00:12:09
a much
00:12:10
more rigorous basis than a general ob
00:12:11
gyn
00:12:13
you have fertility or reproductive
00:12:15
endocrinology
00:12:16
and infertility those are the docs that
00:12:18
are going to be able to really help
00:12:20
patients get pregnant
00:12:21
or have any other reproductive trap
00:12:23
abnormalities that they want to help
00:12:25
that's another subspecialty you have
00:12:27
urogynecology
00:12:28
for those of you who are really into all
00:12:30
of the female bladder
00:12:32
prolapses that are out there the
00:12:34
cystoceles the rectoceles
00:12:36
that you really were into the type of
00:12:38
surgery and you want to help women in
00:12:40
that sense
00:12:41
we also have gynecology oncology so
00:12:43
remember you have ovarian cancer
00:12:46
you have fallopian tube cancer uterine
00:12:48
cancer cervical cancer
00:12:50
and all of those things are definitely
00:12:52
addressed by a gynecology oncologist
00:12:54
and that is a very fulfilling specialty
00:12:56
as well
00:12:57
there is also a small minimally invasive
00:13:00
or mis specialty that if you felt like
00:13:02
you didn't get
00:13:03
enough minimally invasive surgery in
00:13:05
your residency depending on where you
00:13:07
were
00:13:07
taught or educated that you can do that
00:13:09
and really hone in on those skills and
00:13:11
then again become one of those surgeons
00:13:13
that is really proficient in that type
00:13:15
of surgery so you get to have all of
00:13:17
those specialties if needed and that
00:13:18
would be after your four years of
00:13:20
residency
00:13:21
i chose to do general obstetrics and
00:13:23
gynecology because i love all of it and
00:13:25
i wanted to be
00:13:26
do a little piece of all of those and
00:13:28
not be honed into one own thing
00:13:31
however i am kind of more specializing
00:13:33
in the robotic surgery
00:13:35
as well which again is your own choosing
00:13:37
particularly when you go into private
00:13:39
practice
00:13:40
that you can choose exactly the niche
00:13:42
that you want
00:13:43
for example another thing that i'm
00:13:45
really into right now
00:13:47
is being able to help those patients
00:13:49
that are um
00:13:50
transitioning and those transgender
00:13:52
patients that would like to have a
00:13:53
hysterectomy
00:13:54
we're able to get those patients in and
00:13:56
follow along with them as they do all of
00:13:57
their hormones and things of that nature
00:14:00
so there's a wide variety of things you
00:14:01
can do but again you have to start from
00:14:03
the beginning
00:14:04
you do your undergraduate you do your
00:14:07
medical school and anything that's going
00:14:08
to help you get into medical school as i
00:14:10
mentioned before i did do a one-year
00:14:13
post-baccal award program
00:14:14
at georgetown when i did medical school
00:14:16
that really helped me
00:14:17
to transition into my medical school
00:14:20
career time
00:14:21
following that your residency
00:14:23
potentially maybe some specialties after
00:14:25
that and finally being able to go out
00:14:27
into open practice
00:14:29
and forming all of the procedures that
00:14:30
you'd like to do or just seeing patients
00:14:32
in the office
00:14:33
again you could also be a hospitalist
00:14:35
which i mentioned those are people that
00:14:37
only do obstetrics and gynecology at the
00:14:40
hospital base so they just have a 9-5
00:14:42
so you can definitely manage your hours
00:14:44
as well because being an ob
00:14:46
has a lot of extensive hours those calls
00:14:48
that we talked about in terms of 24-hour
00:14:50
calls in the office
00:14:52
particularly depending on your group my
00:14:54
group is actually very big so i have
00:14:56
those 24-hour calls about two or three
00:14:58
times a month
00:14:59
but if you were in a much smaller
00:15:00
practice you might have to follow your
00:15:02
own patients and therefore be on call a
00:15:04
little bit longer
00:15:05
and so knowing the things that you want
00:15:07
in your lifestyle
00:15:09
and the type of doctor that you want to
00:15:12
be
00:15:12
will also help you tune in and hone in
00:15:14
on the places that you that is going to
00:15:16
be the best setting for you to be the
00:15:17
best ob gyn that you can be as well
00:15:20
so you put all your time in you went to
00:15:22
all of the schooling you have
00:15:24
so much in student loans how much am i
00:15:26
going to get paid when i become an ob
00:15:28
gyn
00:15:29
i will tell you first of all that's
00:15:31
going to depend what state you go to
00:15:34
and again what choice you make obviously
00:15:36
those sub-specialties of gynecology
00:15:39
oncology urogynecology
00:15:41
maternal fetal medicine they're going to
00:15:43
be in the higher bracket
00:15:44
usually probably coming in anywhere in
00:15:47
the fours to 600
00:15:49
whereas a general ob gyn you're getting
00:15:51
into the threes to maybe 500s
00:15:54
you could get much lower salary if
00:15:57
you're at a very high population
00:15:59
place um so for example i live in san
00:16:02
antonio texas
00:16:03
in austin they have a lot more ob gyns
00:16:07
so their salaries are actually starting
00:16:08
much lower somewhere between the
00:16:11
150s to the 250s over time with
00:16:14
experience you obviously will generate
00:16:16
more revenue
00:16:18
but when you first go into a practice
00:16:19
and this is private practice
00:16:21
you're going to have most of the time
00:16:22
just a base salary
00:16:24
and then from that depending on the
00:16:26
number of patients that you see
00:16:28
the number of surgeries that you do your
00:16:30
income will start to increase
00:16:32
so don't be alarmed if you choose a
00:16:35
particular city
00:16:36
that you're not seeing these 300 400s
00:16:39
you're really seeing more of 150 to 200
00:16:42
over time that will accumulate an
00:16:44
increase however you sometimes will
00:16:46
start on those lower numbers
00:16:47
depending on your choices again you will
00:16:50
have a difference if you're a
00:16:51
hospitalist
00:16:53
here in san antonio the hospitalists are
00:16:55
usually started somewhere at around 300
00:16:58
k per year where as
00:17:01
again general ob gyns here if you go
00:17:04
into a practice i think they're starting
00:17:05
nowadays more in the two
00:17:07
to 250s and so that's kind of a quick
00:17:10
overview of how money matters on this
00:17:13
um but obviously again with experience
00:17:15
with your
00:17:16
timing how many patients you see that
00:17:18
number keeps going up
00:17:20
so you do have to think about your life
00:17:22
balance
00:17:23
um and your life and work balance i
00:17:26
would say
00:17:26
because if you want to make much more
00:17:28
money then you can bring in 40 patients
00:17:31
a day
00:17:32
but how much time is that leaving you
00:17:33
for your family so you have to
00:17:35
prioritize that way
00:17:36
in general i will tell you in my
00:17:38
practice i probably see between 30 to 35
00:17:41
patients a day
00:17:42
um and again i do those three calls a
00:17:46
month
00:17:46
and that is particularly plenty for me
00:17:48
and satisfying in terms of where
00:17:51
um we lie in terms of monetary as well
00:17:53
as lifestyle choices
00:17:54
but you could always tweet those numbers
00:17:56
depending on where you really want to
00:17:58
see yourself
00:17:59
so a lot of things you've got to think
00:18:01
about is you know how are patients going
00:18:03
to
00:18:03
receive any information or what are some
00:18:05
issues that you might have
00:18:06
on your daily basis when you are an ob
00:18:09
gyn
00:18:10
so i think a few things we can talk
00:18:12
about on that front is
00:18:14
obviously results as i mentioned before
00:18:16
sometimes we're the first people who
00:18:18
actually diagnose
00:18:19
an endometrial cancer or a breast cancer
00:18:22
and so
00:18:23
one of those issues is one how you're
00:18:25
going to talk to the patient
00:18:26
obviously be empathetic but be able to
00:18:29
make sure that those referrals are done
00:18:31
appropriately and
00:18:32
quickly so the patient gets their best
00:18:34
outcome
00:18:35
now in some instances you have to really
00:18:37
talk to patients and make sure that they
00:18:39
understand the appropriate diagnosis
00:18:42
because they can leave the office and
00:18:44
maybe not follow up because they didn't
00:18:46
understand appropriately
00:18:48
and then you see them you know a year
00:18:49
later for their annual exam
00:18:52
and they never got any follow-up or any
00:18:54
of the recommended
00:18:56
direction that you had previously spoken
00:18:59
of and so
00:18:59
that really becomes an issue for a lot
00:19:01
of patients that they feel they weren't
00:19:02
treated appropriately or that
00:19:04
we miss something so you always want to
00:19:06
make sure you're following your
00:19:08
guidelines
00:19:09
documenting everything that you talk to
00:19:11
your patients about as well as
00:19:13
the risk of everything and what the
00:19:15
percentages are if you're able to kind
00:19:17
of quote those
00:19:18
so that you don't have to have that type
00:19:20
of liability in the end
00:19:21
ob gyn has a high high liability risk
00:19:24
one for that gynecologic part but more
00:19:26
importantly for the obstetrics
00:19:28
there is an entire new person developing
00:19:31
in your patient's womb
00:19:33
and so once they're born could they have
00:19:35
any issues in terms of as you guys i'm
00:19:37
sure have already heard is there any
00:19:39
autism issues was there a shoulder
00:19:41
dystocia that could have been prevented
00:19:43
why did i get a c-section when i wanted
00:19:45
a vaginal delivery
00:19:47
and all of those things are obviously
00:19:49
brought up or if babies end up in the
00:19:51
nicu
00:19:52
and why did they have to be in the nicu
00:19:54
was there something that we could have
00:19:55
done to prevent that
00:19:57
even to an extreme of an actual
00:20:00
congenital abnormality a heart condition
00:20:03
that was not seen on imogene and was
00:20:06
found subsequently after birth
00:20:08
you know do you have to go back and
00:20:09
review all of those ultrasounds
00:20:11
and make sure that we didn't miss
00:20:13
anything one just to make sure for the
00:20:15
liability purposes and two
00:20:16
as an education for the future so that
00:20:18
instant doesn't happen again
00:20:20
and so making sure that you are always
00:20:22
up to date on the latest in terms of
00:20:24
different testings what you could offer
00:20:26
your patients
00:20:27
as well as being up to date on
00:20:29
ultrasound reviewing imaging high-risk
00:20:31
physicians
00:20:32
are going to be the safest routes for
00:20:34
yourself but more particularly for your
00:20:36
patients you never want to
00:20:38
have any type of pregnancy or outcome
00:20:40
have a
00:20:41
abnormal outcome or a disfortunate
00:20:43
outcome when we could have prevented
00:20:44
that
00:20:45
those are going to be your major things
00:20:46
to really look for okay
00:20:49
so we did a really good review of what
00:20:51
to expect what to know how to get here
00:20:53
but what is the best part of my job in
00:20:56
general
00:20:56
my job is awesome i think the best best
00:20:59
part as i've mentioned a few times
00:21:02
is how satisfied patients are how happy
00:21:04
patients are
00:21:05
and the fact that i constantly have to
00:21:06
keep learning there are always new
00:21:08
recommendations that
00:21:10
you have to just stay on top of and so
00:21:12
you continuously are educating yourself
00:21:14
and you feel like you're stimulated in a
00:21:16
sense it's helping
00:21:17
the community itself a good example
00:21:19
right now is covid covid19 and pregnancy
00:21:22
obviously it's never happened before and
00:21:25
so i've been doing a lot of articles
00:21:27
and a lot of conversations with
00:21:29
different media groups as well as
00:21:32
social media to make sure that the word
00:21:34
is out there that patients
00:21:35
one are educated feel less scared about
00:21:38
being in this type of pandemic because
00:21:40
while they're pregnant making sure that
00:21:42
everything really works out
00:21:43
appropriately so my
00:21:44
best best days are when patients are
00:21:47
very thankful at the end that say thank
00:21:49
you for all of the information
00:21:50
i've never heard anybody describe it to
00:21:52
me that way no one's ever given me all
00:21:54
of this information i now completely
00:21:56
understand
00:21:57
if my patients can be their own
00:21:59
self-advocates after having a
00:22:00
conversation with me
00:22:01
i find that being the most rewarding and
00:22:04
so that type of life is wonderful
00:22:06
and i really really hope that you all
00:22:08
will choose be an ob gyn
00:22:10
the other major part is the surgery i
00:22:12
always will go back to surgical
00:22:14
intervention it is
00:22:15
a great um thing to do that you're able
00:22:18
to use your hands and help patients
00:22:20
in whatever way possible even in the
00:22:22
office i
00:22:23
do iud placements we do nexplanon
00:22:26
placements we do
00:22:27
biopsies in the office so there are lots
00:22:29
of small little procedures you could do
00:22:31
that will keep you really good at your
00:22:33
surgical techniques
00:22:34
as well as still seeing patients in the
00:22:36
office and keeping your brain working
00:22:38
your hands working
00:22:39
basically everything that you learned in
00:22:41
medical school you are literally using
00:22:43
every single day
00:22:44
um but on a specific group of patients
00:22:46
and your specialty
00:22:48
is the best one if you pick ob gyn
00:22:52
okay we are done for the day i hope
00:22:55
we've answered most of your questions
00:22:57
if we haven't please message down below
00:22:59
and we will comment right back and
00:23:01
answer all of those for you
00:23:02
i'd love to say a good shout out to dr
00:23:04
antonio webb
00:23:06
our solo shot guys we did an amazing job
00:23:08
of covering everything that we could
00:23:10
but i have to get back to it please let
00:23:13
me know if you need anything from me
00:23:14
otherwise i'll see you have a good one
00:23:25
[Music]
00:23:27
uh