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Table of Contents

This article covers the most common obstacles that an IMG from Europe or South America may face as they try to begin a career in Medicine in the United States. I go over some of the tips and strategies to make this transition as smooth as possible.

Number 3:  Be Prepared to Work Hard 

Another key piece of information that you may not realize coming form an International Medical System is the life of a Medical Doctor in the US is not as glamorous or as appealing as you may have seen portrayed on "ER" or "House."  Doctors just starting out in the profession in the US are forced to work long-hours and it can be a tremendous strain on your relationship with family, friends, and spouses.  If you are transferring your entire family over to the US with you as you begin your journey in Medicine, be prepared to not see them a great deal of time for the first few years.  

A colleague of my often compared  practicing Medicine in the US to being deployed overseas if you were in the US Military.  In both circumstances, the families have to be self-sufficient because you will not be able to see them for the majority of the week.  Although there will be opportunities to go home, you may have 1 or 2 hours of face-time with your children and spouse before you need to sleep to do this all over again the next day.  That is roughly the same amount of time you may have to Face-Time or Skype your loved ones if you were stationed on a military base somewhere else.  The sad thing is that in the healthcare setting, most of the doctors are at least in the same zip cope as the hospital.  Although Residency Programs claim they are capping the number of hours a young doctor has to work at 80 hours per week, just realize that that means that they only report the first 80 hours a week.  Chances are, you will be creeping up to at least 100 hours a week in some rotations.  

Number 4:  Adjust Your Mentality of How You May Have Practiced in Your Home Country 

If you have read as far as this part, you may see a striking similarity to Point Number 2. You will need to learn new therapies or management techniques in the US that will not be the same procedure as your home country but Point Number 4 is referring to something else entirely.  For whatever reason, the US is one of the only places on the planet that is a "reactionary health-care system" as opposed to a "preventative healthcare system" in most locations elsewhere.  If this is hard to imagine, I will give you a simple example.  In the US, doctors will not put nearly the same effort into convincing patients to alter their lifestyle that would be done in other countries abroad.  If a patient continues to gain weight and eat fast food, he will be prescribed a concoction of statins and Beta-blockers but in a large portion of these patients, you will be managing him only slightly because a "by-pass" or "stent placement" will be on his horizon very soon.  In Europe, the focus is to prevent the patient for every entering the operating room in the first place.  Doctors will vigorously try to educate the patients to make significant lifestyle modifications.  

The beneficial thing about Europe or South America is that doctors are still very respected in those communities.  A patient will not argue and if a doctor gives a patient a bit of medical advice, they will do everything in their power to make sure that the doctor's will is achieved.  When you enter the US, be prepared to deal with patients who know better than you because they typed some of their symptoms on "Dr. Google" and they are sure they have cancer instead of the disease you diagnose.  They will question you every step along the way and can be difficult to manage because they may stop medications prematurely if they feel that they do not notice a change in their health.  True, this is true for a patient anywhere in the world but once you start getting phone calls treating to "sue you for malpractice"  you will soon realize that there are a lot of opportunities to regret your choice to move into the US system.  

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