A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

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A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016

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My Current Job…  Attending Staff Physician at Valley Medical Center in San Jose (1996- present)  Generalist- obstetrics, gynecology, surgery, area of interest is Family Planning  Employed by the County of Santa Clara  Safety net Hospital  Residency training program  Stanford medical students come to our hospital

Transcript of A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

Page 1: A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

A Career in ObGynMichele Hugin, MD, FACOG

9 February 2016

Page 2: A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

About me…

Only child No doctors in my family “candy striper” at El Camino Hospital Graduated from Los Altos High 1983 BA and MS in Biology from UCSD 1988 MD Tufts University Boston 1992 ObGyn Residency 1996

Page 3: A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

My Current Job…

Attending Staff Physician at Valley Medical Center in San Jose (1996- present)

Generalist- obstetrics, gynecology, surgery, area of interest is Family Planning

Employed by the County of Santa Clara Safety net Hospital Residency training program Stanford medical students come to our hospital

Page 4: A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

Path to Becoming an ObGyn

Undergraduate education Requirements for Medical School- 1 year biology, 1 year

physical and 1 year Organic chemistry, 1 year physics

Take the MCAT- standardized test of above subjects and psychology/social science

Application, essay, interview

Page 5: A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

So you got into Medical School… Medical school 4-5 years

First 2 years in classroom- anatomy, physiology, pharmacology, second 2 years are “clinical”

Third year core rotations- medicine, surgery, pediatrics, ob/gyn, psychiatry

Fourth year electives

Residency 4 years for ObGyn (3 years from medicine and pediatrics to

6 years for Neurosurgery and Plastic Surgery) Salary $45,000/year. 80 hr work week. $11.25/h

Page 6: A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

If you still want MORE training…

Fellowships in Ob Gyn Gyn Oncology- cancer surgery, chemotherapy Pelvic reconstruction Infertility High risk Obstetrics Family Planning Minimally invasive surgery

Page 7: A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

What about the money…?

Almost 90% of medical school graduates have debt This debt can be $150,000 Average salary for ObGyn approx. $250,000 Malpractice insurance is high for ObGyn (highest is

Neurosurgery) It depends where you practice

Page 8: A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

How do I know if it’s right for me? Do you enjoy a challenge? Are you curious? Are you not afraid to work hard? Do you want to help people and be a positive force in your

community?

Page 9: A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

Why did I become and ObGyn?

I liked Biology especially Physiology- I had a really great teacher in college who gave great presentations like pulmonary physiology on Everest

I tested into a helping profession (preschool teacher, clergy) I’m a good listener I wanted to make a difference in the lives of women

Page 10: A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

A day in my life…

Clinic (office practice) see patients whop are scheduled for appointments

pregnancy check upswell woman examsminor procedures under local anesthesiacomputerized charting

Labor and Deliverymanage laboring patients (preterm, term)scheduled cesarean sectionstriage patients (determine if they are in labor or not)

Page 11: A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

On other days…

Operating room Scheduled surgeries – major or minor, from 30 minutes to

several hours on my feet teaching residents and medical students, small team of people fast paced work

If patients stay in the hospital I make “rounds” the next day to check on them

Administrative work, preparing lectures, interviewing prospective residency candidates, doing research, making schedules

Page 12: A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

What qualities make a “good doctor” Respect your patient Be an advocate for your patient Promote health Be empathetic Listen. “You can’t talk while you are listening” Work cooperatively Pay attention to detail

Page 13: A Career in ObGyn Michele Hugin, MD, FACOG 9 February 2016.

GOOD LUCK!