05619nam 2200709Ia 450 991045961180332120200520144314.01-283-58097-797866138934200-19-155246-10-19-157891-6(CKB)2670000000087819(EBL)665470(OCoLC)727648490(SSID)ssj0000593369(PQKBManifestationID)11336456(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000593369(PQKBWorkID)10736777(PQKB)10323205(MiAaPQ)EBC665470(Au-PeEL)EBL665470(CaPaEBR)ebr10581657(CaONFJC)MIL389342(EXLCZ)99267000000008781920080919d2009 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrSo you want to be a brain surgeon?[electronic resource] the medical careers guide /edited by Simon Eccles, Stephan Sanders3rd ed.Oxford ;New York Oxford University Pressc20091 online resource (329 p.)Medical careers guideIncludes index.0-19-923196-6 Contents; Introduction; Using this book; Key to the summaries; Medical careers terminology; Contributors; 1 Career routes; The 'usual' route: Career overview; Foundation programme; Specialty training; Membership exams; General practitioner; Consultant; Alternative routes: Staff and associate specialist grade (SASG); Academic career; Armed Forces career; 'Off the beaten path' career; Overseas career; Leaving clinical medicine; 2 Specialty overviews; Acute care common stem (ACCS); Anaesthetics; General Practice; Internal medicine; Obstetrics and gynaecology; Paediatrics; Pathology; PsychiatryPublic healthRadiology; Surgery; Surgery continued; 3 How to get a job; Choosing a career; Finding jobs; Competition for ST1/CT1 applications; Competition for ST3/ST4 applications; Staying competitive; Surviving the application system; Curriculum vitae (CV); Interviews; What happens if you don't get a job?; Taking time out; Working abroad; Applying from overseas; Doctors' pay; Flexible training; 4 The organization of medical careers; Postgraduate training: MMC; Postgraduate training: Tooke and the future; Switching specialist training pathways; Overseeing educationAlternative routes (Articles 14 and 11)Discrimination; Women in medicine; 5 Career chapters; Academic GP; Academic medicine; Acupuncture; Acute medicine; Anaesthetics; Army medicine; Audiovestibular medicine; Breast and oncoplastic surgery; Cardiology; Cardiothoracic surgery; Chemical pathology; Civil Service medicine; Clinical genetics; Clinical oncologists; Clinical pharmacology and theraputics; Community paediatrics; Dermatology; Ear, nose and throat; Elderly medicine; Emergency medicine; Endocrinology and diabetes; Expedition medicine; Forensic medical examiner (police surgeon)Forensic pathologyForensic psychiatry; Gastroenterology; General practice; General surgery (colorectal surgery); Genitourinary medicine (GUM); GP in a rural setting; GP with a special interest; Gynaecological oncology; Gynaecology; Haematology; Hand surgery; Histopathology; Homeopathic medicine; Immunology; Infectious diseases and tropical medicine; Intensive care; Journalism and medical writing; Locuming; Maternal and fetal medicine; Maxillofacial surgery; Medical defence organizations; Medical education; Medical entrepreneur; Medical ethics; Medical law; Medical management consultingMedical managerMedical microbiology; Medical oncologists; Medical politics; Merlin; Metabolic medicine; Neonatology; Neurology; Neurosurgery; Nuclear medicine; Obstetrics; Occupational medicine; Ophthalmology; Orthopaedic surgery; Overseas aid; Paediatric surgery; Paediatrics; Pain management; Palliative medicine; Pharmaceutical medicine; Plastic and reconstructive surgery; Pre-hospital medicine; Prison medicine; Psychiatry: child and adolescent; Psychiatry: general adult; Psychiatry: old age; Psychiatry of learning disability; Psychotherapy; Public health; Radiology: diagnosticRadiology: interventionalWhich doctors make the most money? Which doctors work the hardest? How do you become an expedition doctor? What is it like to be a brain surgeon? Will it affect your career if you take a break? If any of these questions are relevant to you then this could be the most important book you ever read. Whether you are wondering what career to choose or want to know how to follow a particular medical career, you'll find the answers inside.Deciding which path to pursue has a huge impact on your future life and yet few doctors or medical students ever receive formal careers advice. This has become evenMedical careers guide.MedicineSpecialties and specialistsVocational guidanceMedicineVocational guidanceGreat BritainMedical educationGreat BritainElectronic books.MedicineSpecialties and specialistsVocational guidance.MedicineVocational guidanceMedical education610.69Eccles Simon994997Sanders Stephan966636MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910459611803321So you want to be a brain surgeon2279155UNINA