Once stepping foot in medical school, especially if specialiizing in surgery, the next 10 years are basically mapped out for future otolaryngologists, who don’t have control over much, including whether they’ll be able to get pregnant if they want a baby.
COSM 2023 Sessions: A Review of Otolaryngology Topics
In April 2023, we listed a variety of topics at the 2023 Combined Otolaryngology Spring Meetings (COSM) in Boston that had piqued the interest of ENTtoday’s physician editor Robin W. Lindsay, MD. This time, we’ve taken a closer look and highlighted some of the topics chosen.
Smartphone Apps are Useful Tools for Otolaryngology Residents and Clinicians
Competency-Based Otolaryngology Training Is Becoming More of a Fixture, But Needs to Be Fully Developed
What Happens to Medical Students Who Don’t Match?
Opening Doors: An Otolaryngologist Helps to Build Diversity
Carl M. Truesdale, MD, a facial plastic and reconstructive surgery fellow in Beverly Hills, recently wrote about his commitment to and experience in helping to diversify medicine during his residency in Michigan Medicine’s department of otolaryngology–head and neck surgery
Letter from the Editor: Medicine’s March Madness
Months of residency interviews, letter writing, and phone calls come down to one day to find out who we will spend the next five years training.
How To Survive the First Year of Medical Residency
How to thrive during the first year of residency
9 Tips For Surviving the First Year of Medical Residency
While you may have to be the best and brightest in medical school to nab an otolaryngology residency, intelligence alone won’t get a physician through the grueling, sleep-deprived years of […]
Ethical Implications of Burnout in Residents
Burnout is a major issue that needs to be recognized, understood, and mitigated