 Welcome back to the channel, everybody. For those of you who are new around here, my name is Michael, aka Dr. Cellini. On today's video, we're going to be talking about my favorite specialties in medicine. The reason I'm doing this is because I did a video on my least favorite specialties in medicine and you all seem to enjoy it. So we're gonna talk about my favorite ones in no particular order. So let's get into it. Let's go. All right, so first and foremost, if you haven't seen my prior video, I'll go ahead and link it up here and you should watch it directly after this video. So in that video, I talked about my least favorite specialties or the specialties in medicine that I like the least. And again, I'm gonna put out a disclaimer. Just because I mentioned my favorite specialties in this video, it does not mean that the other specialties I dislike, it doesn't mean that I hate those providers. There's something for everybody and every personality type likes a specific specialty. So these are just the ones I like. They're not for everybody. I'm not making fun of the other specialties or the other doctors. These are just what I like. Let's get into number one specialty I like the most. Now, I think you probably realize that the number one specialty I like the most is interventional radiology for obvious reasons since I am an interventional radiologist. The reason I went into this specialty is for a million different reasons, but number one is one of the most, if not the most technologically advanced field in medicine. We get to save lives from someone who's bleeding. We get to kill cancer. We get to do many different procedures all under image guidance on many patients and out of the hospital. And we get to kind of MacGyver certain procedures and think outside of the box for every certain patient and customize procedures for specific patients. It's kind of why I like it amongst many other things, but we're not gonna get into my specialty today because obviously I enjoy it. That's why I picked it. So let's get into the other specialties that I also like and almost consider. Okay, so the first specialty that I like the most and I almost went into, if I didn't go into interventional radiology is, as many of you know, urology. Now I've said many times before, I just like the urological environment. For some reason, I did a few rotations in this field and everybody just has a good sense of humor, including the patients. A lot of the older gentlemen patients used to make me laugh so hard. They would just say funny things, which you can obviously imagine. I'm not gonna get into that here, but it was just a fun field. On top of the patients, the colleagues, and so your staff, I also love the procedural aspect of this field. They do a lot of simple image data procedures where they get in and get out, whether it be injecting contrast in the bladder to see the uriners, placing urinal stents, exchanging urinal stents, blasting stones with some shockwave therapy, or many different other procedures. They also had some pretty cool surgeries and the reason I didn't like it and didn't go into it is because they have a lot of longer surgeries and that's just not for me. So I did love the field, did love the procedures, didn't like the surgeries, but overall, love urology. In fact, many of you probably don't know that urologists and interventional radiologists work pretty closely together because oftentimes we have to access the kidney via nephrostomy tube or suprapubic tube and that helps the urologists out and we kind of work in tandem helping patients. So you'll always find the urologists and interventionalists are pretty tight in the hospital. And I'm hot, so let me take a coffee break. One thing about New York City, no central air, it gets pretty hot in here. Okay, the next specialty I like the most may come at a surprise to you and that is rural family medicine. Now, this is probably like out of left field, you're probably like, what? Not a surgery, especially rural family medicine that's so specific and also so random, right? Well, I'll tell you why I like this field so much and that is because it's the way medicine is supposed to be practiced. Now, I'll give you an example. One of my very close friends, Jeremy and his wife, Angela, they are both rural family medicine doctors in the Southeast United States. They have a small practice. They see patients in that specific town in that specific area and you are the town doctor for lack of better words. So they go to you, they listen to you, the patients trust you. You're like the doctor who does everything and when you're practicing in a rural area, you become like the all-encompassing doctor. You suture lacerations, you're doing like every type of primary care medicine. You're doing minor surgical procedures. You do everything because there aren't many options in these small towns and they go see you for like everything medically related. Now, on top of that, which is arguably the most important part of working in this kind of environment, is you develop long-term and lifelong relationships with your patients and that is how medicine is supposed to be. You get to know your patients, you take care of them and see them for many, many, many years and you become kind of like a close family member that they can trust and they can confide in and it's just how medicine is supposed to be practiced. I can't really describe it to you, but if you ever do a rural family medicine rotation, you'll know what I'm talking about. Just a little aside, it's just nice because you do good things for these patients and they respect you, they love you for this. There's just something about working in that kind of environment that kind of warms your heart and I know my good friend loves working in that kind of environment and his father also did the exact same thing so it's kind of a cool tradition. The only reason I don't practice that way is because I'm kind of a city guy, can't live in rural small town America but if you can't live in small town America and you enjoy living in that kind of place, it's not a bad gig. Rural family medicine, love it. So the coffee break here, real quick. Next favorite specialty in all of medicine is critical care medicine. Now you probably didn't think I was gonna say that but I really genuinely enjoyed my time in the ICU whether it be the surgical ICU or the medical ICU. I rotated and spent time in both ICU's and working with critical care physicians in both separate settings and I had a fantastic time. I didn't think I would like it. I don't wanna be an internal medicine doctor but I do like the field because it's like all medicine. However, critical care medicine is taking care of the absolute sickest, sickest, sickest patients in the hospital and they deal with some pretty crazy stuff and you're trying to like rack your brain, trying to come up with what the heck is going on with these patients because they're super sick and the crazy part about it was you got to see a lot of these patients who were severely sick knocking on death's door, do a 180, turn around and like walk out of the hospital a few weeks later, which was crazy to me and you really get shown just how resilient the body is. I don't know, that always shocked me because when you see patients in the condition that they are in the ICU, you're like, how are they gonna make it out of here alive? And a lot of them do. The cool thing about the ICU too is you get to kind of think outside of the box and come up with differential diagnoses because you'll get a lot of patients that are either just found down and very sick and you don't know what the heck is going on with them so you kind of have to start from square one. You get a full imaging, you get full labs, come up with differentials, do a full physical exam. It's very like house medicine and not to mention the team in the ICU is phenomenal or most the ICU's, the nurses and physicians, they are always top notch. They never have trouble getting IVs. They do so much in those ICU's taking care of these patients. So for me to experience and see those patients and treat these patients, it was very eye-opening and really showed you what the human body is capable of when they have a good team supporting them and getting them better. So I considered briefly going into ICU medicine or critical care medicine, but I think what I really liked about it was taking care of sickest patients and kind of using your brain to come up with diagnoses, which is why I like radiology. And then what I also liked is you get to do procedures like arterial lines, central lines, chest tubes, parasynteses, thoracynteses, all those kind of civil procedures. Then I realized I just like radiology and IR. So that's critical care medicine. I really enjoyed it. It's fantastic. It's fascinating. Love it, love it, love it. But it wasn't for me. And the absolute last favorite specialty of mine that's also probably coming out of surprise to you is transplant surgery. Transplant surgery and interventional radiologists are also very tight in the hospital. It's kind of the same relationship with IR and urology. Anytime transplant needs us, we're always there for them. I don't know how it is at your hospital, but that's how it is at every hospital I've ever worked for. Transplant surgeons are extremely bright. The stuff they deal with with their patients, the transplanted organs are very time-sensitive if anything goes wrong. So we are always there to help them whenever they need us. Say you have a transplanted liver that has something wrong with the vascular system that they connected, we can go in there and stent it if they need it. Say you have a transplant kidney that also has a narrowing where they sutured in the renal artery into the iliac artery. We can go in there and balloon it open and stent it if we need to. And it's important that you act fast when there is something wrong with these transplanted organs because they can fail pretty quickly and for that reason, we are always there for the transplant surgeons. That's not the reason I like the specialty. I like the specialty because it's just crazy fascinating. I mean, think about it. A lot of you probably don't know, but if someone dies and they're going to take their organs and transplant them somewhere else, they kind of alert the whole system around that area, that local region, the transplant surgeon will take a private jet to whatever hospital that patient is at that they're harvesting the organs. And I know people don't like to say harvesting organs, but are procuring it. I don't know what the correct term is, but people don't like to say harvest organs. So I'll just say borrowing those organs. I don't know what you want me to say. So they take a private jet to that patient, operate, take their organs, put them on ice, take a private jet back, transplant that organ the same time quickly as possible, and that's that. It's like crazy. When they're on call and an organ's available, they just hop in a jet, go pick it up, take it back and put it in a new patient. Just think for a minute and say, we have the ability to take someone's organ and place it in somebody else. And it's like nothing ever happened. That's literally Frankenstein sci-fi stuff. So I think that's one of the coolest specialties. Again, we work closely with them, love all the transplant people, and yeah. So that officially concludes this video. Hopefully you all enjoyed my favorite medical specialties. And again, if you haven't seen my least favorite medical specialties, link up here. Make sure you leave a comment below if you like any of these specialties or plan on going into them. Make sure you smash the like, subscribe on my Instagram and TikTok if you don't already. And I'll see you all on the next video. Bye.