Now that I'm out of the Q5 frying pan and into the Q4 fire, it seems like the right time to write about part-time residency.
One or two years ago, part-time residency wasn't even a glimmer in my imagination. Never occurred to me that it might be possible. Then I received my UCSF residency interview invitation and discovered !they offer part-time residency! I interviewed there -- and was so impressed with the program -- but ultimately decided that adding an hour long commute to my life was the opposite of family-friendly. But the seed was planted and I matched at Stanford with the expectation, misguided maybe, that part-time residency was going to work for me. Hey, if they can do it at UCSF, why not at Stanford?
As it turns out, they *can* do it at Stanford. At least, I can. After some careful negotiating, I am the proud owner of a shiny new part-time residency, starting next year. I'll spread my remaining two years over three years total, doing two months on, followed by one month off for 36 months. Even better, the call schedule quiets down considerably starting next year. As an R2, I anticipate five or six call months; I'll have four or five call months as an R3. In other words, stanting in July, my life will go like this: call month, followed by elective month, followed by month off. Rinse, repeat.
To say that I am overjoyed about this development is a severe understatement.
There are some downsides here. For one, I won't be paid during my months off and neither will I be eligible for benefits. Happily, Brian earns a salary and receives benefits, so this isn't a crisis. Also, I'll have to keep up my continuity clinic during the off months, at least for the first 24 months. On the one hand, drag. On the other, it's probably for the best that I'll keep the clinical side of my brain engaged during those months off.
While the major motivation here is simple -- more time to mother my small son -- I do anticipate doing some research during my off months and I've begun to talk with my research advisor about possible projects. Even so, he's encouraged me to enjoy these months off for what they are: pulses of diastole amid the systole of residency.
Oh, I am happy about this.
Monday, December 7, 2009
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2 comments:
Hooray! Hooray! Hooray!
You're next! :)
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