 So, you probably saw that now. I was at work earlier today and now I am home from work in my unfinished, completely disastrous studio, which I'll show you in an upcoming video. I'm doing like this whole unboxing video slash desk setup video, but literally disaster because of everything that's happening with my desk. Not gonna get into it now because you've seen by the title of this video, we were going to be talking if fellowship is worth it. So let's go ahead and get into it. All right, so again, excuse the mess. This is like literally, I don't know if you can see this or not, this is literally the upside down desk that I'm setting up on the floor right now. They had to re-deliver the actual top to this desk two times now, oh wait, three times now. So that's coming soon. And I already talked about it and I already said I wasn't gonna talk about it but I did, but let's get into the video. So, answer the first question. Was interventional radiology fellowship worth it? And the answer is, yes. All right, so reason number one why I think IR fellowship is perfect and you should do it is because IR is very much a hands-on field. It is very much a tactile field just as much as it is cerebral. And what I mean by that is almost everything you do in IR is based on the field. Every procedure you do has a certain tactile response. Ultimately, doing a whole year of IR, it teaches you just how hard you can push or how aggressive or when to be aggressive and that's something you can't really teach. You have to just do it. So when you do it over and over again, you know exactly the limitations, exactly how hard you can push and exactly the tactile response when things are going great or when things are not going great. This entire field is almost based around knowing how hard you can push or when to push harder or how aggressive to be with your push. So I'll give you a little example. So anybody who's starting out doing central lines especially like a dialysis catheter, which is a pretty big catheter going in your neck, you have to tunnel the catheter underneath the skin and oftentimes getting that catheter in the neck or getting the peel away sheath into the neck can be very difficult because you're fighting against a lot of soft tissue with a very large 15 French or higher object. So the biggest thing I see with people starting out is when they're first trying to place that line and put the sheath over the wire, they get to the skin and then they get to it and it's not going easily so they just stop because mainly they don't know how hard you can push and they don't know how safe it is to push hard. So what I always do, it's easy for me now is if someone's struggling I'll just go over there and go boom and like jam it in because I know the limitations and that's mostly what IR is. It's basically knowing how hard to push and knowing when you can push harder. That simplifies our field quite a bit but that's a lot of it, I promise. The second reason you should do a fellowship and why I thought it was worth it because it gives you a chance to kind of immerse yourself into interventional radiology and eat, sleep and breathe IR and that is all you do the whole year and it gets you in that mindset of thinking like an interventional radiologist. Doing IR things or doing IR procedures or thinking about IR becomes routine and it becomes a habit and you end up doing it without even thinking about it which is exactly what you should be doing in fellowship and that's exactly how you will be expected to perform when you're in the hospital as an attending. It's kind of like when you go away for a basketball camp or something. You eat, sleep and breathe basketball and you learn basketball and that's all you do the whole time you're at camp and then you come out better than when you started. It's the same thing in IR except you do it for a year long. It's like a year long IR camp. It's kind of a bad analogy but you know what I mean. The next reason why IR fellowship was worth it to me is that you get to meet a lot of full people. You get to meet all of your co-fellows. You get to form bonds with your co-fellows because you are both going through that crazy thing that is fellowship and as you all have seen on my prior videos when I was on call on fellowship if you haven't seen those go check them out up here. But you've seen how hard we work and how little sleep we get and how long we spend at the hospital and you kind of want to commiserate with your friends or co-fellows because they're the only people that actually understand what you're doing at that time. You form really close bonds with your colleagues and co-fellows and that friendship will last forever. Point being, now I'm two months out of fellowship and all of my fellows still have a group chat where we text each other pretty much daily. We text each other cases. If we're doing a procedure we're not comfortable with. We ask them advice on that procedure. We ask them what techniques they use, what supplies they use, what catheter, what wire, all this stuff. We run things by each other because like I've said many times before there's nobody you can really go to after you finish fellowship. Once you're in attending, you are the person and there's nobody that's gonna really teach you anything anymore. So it's good to have a group of colleagues that you can rely on, that you train together with and yeah, not to mention, you have these friends for life and I don't think I will ever stop texting the group or running things by each other because that's what you do. Even as 10 or 20 year, 30 year attending they still run things by each other and usually it's either their mentors or their co-fellows who they did fellowship with. Also I have another group text with all of my co-fellows slash fifth year residents at UNC who I chat with all the time about cases as well. So it basically just further demonstrates how you keep contact with these people and you build amazing relationships together. The next reason why you should do an hour of fellowship is you get to learn what you don't wanna do or what you don't want out of a career. The thing with fellowship is you get to work with eight a lot of different attendings with a lot of different mentors. Every single person has a different way of doing things. You get to learn a little piece from each one of them and you get to realize which way you don't like doing things which technique you don't like doing, which technique you do like doing and you get to kinda pick and choose what you like amongst every single person you work with and put it off the other and develop your own personal way of doing things. I can't tell you how many times you see your attendings do things and in the back of your head you're like I would never do that if I was in practice. I would do it this way instead of that way. Obviously you don't say that while you're in fellowship but you think it, you talk with your co-fellows about it and then you make a little mental note, I'd rather do it this way than that way. That happens with every procedure, every single day you're in fellowship and you just kinda make mental notes and you move on. You also get to learn what kind of career you want. Do you wanna be an academic interventionalist? Do you wanna be a private practice interventionalist? Do you wanna do complex cases day in and day out? Do you not wanna do IR at all or do you wanna do minimally complex cases? You learn all this in fellowship and you get to see a little bit of everything and that's the most important part. It's like you have a full buffet, you can grab a little bit of this, a little bit of that and kind of gear your career towards whatever way you want. Now just to piggyback that a little bit you also get to figure out what kind of niche you wanna fall into in interventional radiology. So every attending you'll notice if you do an interventional fellowship they'll always sub-sub-specialize or supra-sub-specialize in certain aspects of our field. For instance, some may do more pediatric interventional work or some may do only vascular work like renal angiograms, venous procedures or venous re-pian. Some may do hepatobiliary work or oncology work where you're embolizing liver tumors. Others may focus on your logical aspects of IR like prostate artery embolization or others may focus on uterine fibroid embolizations. There's so many different niches in IR and it's good to see all of them and figure out which kind of niche or pathway you wanna go down in your career. For me, I'm still only two months out so I don't really know what pathway I want to go down. I'm still trying to figure it out, getting used to kind of working on my own and eventually I'll decide what I wanna do. But at least I know I have an idea of what I wanna do because I got to see it all. It's way better than not being able to see anything and kind of figuring out your path as you go. You quickly realize in fellowship you like or dislike something almost immediately. The next reason I thought IR fellowship was worth it is because you get to see and do the most crazy, crazy cases in the entire world that you'll probably never see again. You'll probably never do again, but you get to see them. And that's really important because you get to see the sickest patients. You get to see the most one-off cases of all time. You get to participate or do all of it. You take everything you learn during those cases and apply it going forward in pretty much anything. And even if you don't do complex, crazy stuff later on in your career, at least you can either say you did it or at least take something you learned off that case and apply it to something you do. The next reason I thought IR fellowship was worth it is probably my favorite reason. And that's because you get to try something new. You get to go to a different place and live somewhere new for a year. Maybe you're stuck in a rut. Maybe you're sick of living in the same city for four years and you wanna change. Maybe you broke up with your fiance or a significant other. And maybe you wanna move and live in a new apartment in a huge city and meet other people. That's one of the best benefits of being able to do a fellowship. You don't have to stay put where you are in residency. You can go somewhere new and try something else. Change is a good thing. Whoa, my light flickered. Change is always a good thing. I don't hear what people say. And arguably the most important thing after doing fellowship, you will finally feel comfortable and that itself is worth doing an entire year of fellowship because that is the goal when you're an attending physician, feeling comfortable, feeling confident, doing procedures, doing them safely, doing them effectively, and doing them efficiently is worth everything. It's worth all the hours of call. I promise you it's worth it. And that's why I think fellowship is totally worth it. Probably in any field, but definitely international radiology. So on that note, hopefully this office will be ready on the next video or two and it won't be so echoey in here. Coming soon, I promise, just bear with me. We're still getting our same setup, but thank you for watching this video. Make sure you smash that subscribe button, follow me on Instagram, and tick-tock if you don't already and I'll see you all on the next video. Bye. And in Geronimo's video, go check her out too. Bye.