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In this episode, Ryan talks with a neurologist, Dr. Allison Gray, as they discuss all things about neurology. Notice that Ryan follows a standard regimen of questions in his episodes so you can compare each of the answers to hopefully help enlighten you in choosing your residency.
Allison is working as a neurologist at a large medical group in a community setting in Colorado.
Here are the highlights of the conversation with Allison: When Allison knew she wanted to pursue Neurology:Being drawn more to clinical practice
Types of patients:8am - 5pm
Sees 10 patients a day (This is a lot for neurologists since they have long examinations and they take long histories.)
Breakdown of her 10 patients-
Middle range - It depends on geography and whether you're going to a very competitive program at a big name institution.
Do you see any bias between MDs and DOs for Neurology?None that she's aware of.
What is residency like for Neurology?Appreciating that Neurology was sad sometimes considering there is still no good treatments for Alzheimer's, Dementia, ALS, etc. So you see people facing very devastating illnesses that are chronic, debilitating, and even deathly. Also, Neurology is acutely devastating sometimes. It really takes guts to see someone suffering.
However, Neurology has a great promise and they're seeing wonderful new therapies coming out. Compared to 20 years ago, now there's a huge difference in the way they treat things like MS and genetic disorders.
What do you wish primary care providers knew about Neurology?Neurologists are here to help and they're happy to help primary care physicians and they can always ask for help.
Specialties she works the closest with:Working with industries to discover new treatments
What Allison likes most about being a Neurologist:The difficulty in not being able to offer someone something to fix a problem
Would she have chosen Neurology if she had to do it all over again?Yes, Allison thinks the brain is the most fascinating thing in the human body because it defines who we are as people and human beings.
Sub-specialty opportunities for a Neurologist:
By Ryan Gray4.8
210210 ratings
In this episode, Ryan talks with a neurologist, Dr. Allison Gray, as they discuss all things about neurology. Notice that Ryan follows a standard regimen of questions in his episodes so you can compare each of the answers to hopefully help enlighten you in choosing your residency.
Allison is working as a neurologist at a large medical group in a community setting in Colorado.
Here are the highlights of the conversation with Allison: When Allison knew she wanted to pursue Neurology:Being drawn more to clinical practice
Types of patients:8am - 5pm
Sees 10 patients a day (This is a lot for neurologists since they have long examinations and they take long histories.)
Breakdown of her 10 patients-
Middle range - It depends on geography and whether you're going to a very competitive program at a big name institution.
Do you see any bias between MDs and DOs for Neurology?None that she's aware of.
What is residency like for Neurology?Appreciating that Neurology was sad sometimes considering there is still no good treatments for Alzheimer's, Dementia, ALS, etc. So you see people facing very devastating illnesses that are chronic, debilitating, and even deathly. Also, Neurology is acutely devastating sometimes. It really takes guts to see someone suffering.
However, Neurology has a great promise and they're seeing wonderful new therapies coming out. Compared to 20 years ago, now there's a huge difference in the way they treat things like MS and genetic disorders.
What do you wish primary care providers knew about Neurology?Neurologists are here to help and they're happy to help primary care physicians and they can always ask for help.
Specialties she works the closest with:Working with industries to discover new treatments
What Allison likes most about being a Neurologist:The difficulty in not being able to offer someone something to fix a problem
Would she have chosen Neurology if she had to do it all over again?Yes, Allison thinks the brain is the most fascinating thing in the human body because it defines who we are as people and human beings.
Sub-specialty opportunities for a Neurologist:
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