honestly it makes so much sense that someone who can make these skits and pick out the strange quirks of medicine would do well in psych
@bedtimebiblestories1714 Жыл бұрын
“They have to live in their minds for the rest of their lives and I want to make that a better place for them”… chills. Go Preston!
@briennaann07 Жыл бұрын
I used to work in a cancer hospital and one of the patients said that the doctor who helped them most wasn't their oncologist but their psychiatrist who gave them the mental will to keep going. Congratulations, you're going to make a great psychiatrist!
@charlessavoie2367 Жыл бұрын
Get a dog instead of a "clinically normative mental health professional."
@ILoveMyPomeranian-p6l7 ай бұрын
@@charlessavoie2367Get both! 😂 🐶 👩⚕️
@mlb1978 Жыл бұрын
I’ve been a psychiatrist for 15 years. You’re correct. You can be happy in multiple specialties- I switched from IM. A sense of humor is incredibly helpful for psych. Happy you are joining us.
@jen_81 Жыл бұрын
Hello Dr @mlb1978, as a fresh med grad trying to choose a specialty, I'm curious what made you switch from IM to psych? Did you switch after completing IM training?
@ada5851 Жыл бұрын
As someone in need of a better psychiatrist, thank you for entering the profession. It really needs more people like you. And please take care of yourself so you don't burn out and lose empathy for your patients - see your self care as a prerequisite for good patient care. I believe in you.
@Hamza-li7nq Жыл бұрын
Really good advice!
@TheMrmartintorres Жыл бұрын
I'm not in medicine but as a childhood cancer survivor I can 100% say that doctors who go for their passion make the biggest difference in our lives. It's great that you recognized what you enjoyed about medicine the most and were able to find a way to fully apply that. I appreciate your videos for providing a more lighthearted take on the stress of medicine. Also it's unfortunately amazing that toxic doctors are just like the toxic bosses everywhere else, at least an annoying surgeon can do something useful, lol.
@rishigonuguntla827 Жыл бұрын
Hey Preston, I was also a surgery gunner who did the same thing and am now choosing to apply to psychiatry. Hearing your journey sounded like what went through my own head. I think I've said the exact same thing about improving quality of life being my aim through my practice. It's awesome to hear that other people have done the same thing. Best of luck to you in your intern year!
@cowfangirl4203 ай бұрын
“they have to live inside their minds for the rest of their lives and i wanted to make that a better place for them” is such a profoundly relatable sentiment that i haven’t been able to articulate. i’m in my mid twenties and i’ve recently started planning to return to college with the end goal of psychiatry. my first undergrad experience was one of the worst points in my life mostly due to undiagnosed anxiety/adhd and my lack of understanding and inability to work with/around my behavior. after dropping out i saw a psych for a couple years and honestly i cannot overstate how much that care changed me and the trajectory of my life for the better. the last few years i have already found a lot of fulfillment in working in healthcare (cpht and now ma) but the thought of being able to provide the sort of care that genuinely saved my life for others brings me such a strong sense of meaning and volition in pursuing this career. thank you for this video preston ❤
@DG-cl3gs Жыл бұрын
Also, by treating the mind, you treat their body. Because you speak with them about their nutrition habits, exercise, perspective on life, and everything stems from the brain. You can turn someones entire life around by changing their habits and mindset.
@DG-cl3gs Жыл бұрын
Not saying other docs cant help (they do), such as an ortho fixing a broken ankle. Thats needed, sure. But in terms of preventative medicine I thinkpsychiatry is great because you may put someone on the patht o greatness before they reach that point of no return.
@jordmanbatgod9 ай бұрын
If you haven’t heard of it yet, HealthyGamer is a phenomenal KZbin channel from a Psychiatrist who also studied to become a monk. I think you’d really enjoy his content :)
@sam_i_am_. Жыл бұрын
I have SPMI and I've had the same psychiatrist since 2004. He listens to me, he remembers things that I tell him, he believes in me, and he is the kindest, most wonderful doctor. Best of luck to you.
@SamAndAdamsFishroom Жыл бұрын
Beautifully articulated video Preston. I’m glad you found your passion for psychiatry which really shows in this video. You will do a lot of good for a much needed and very understaffed specialty. I tell my third and fourth year students every day no matter what you do, make sure you do what you love.
@yasminakbari346 Жыл бұрын
Your future patients will be so lucky to have you! Speaking as a radiologist (basically the opposite of a psychiatrist 😂) I have a lot of respect for the unique challenges you face in that field and for anyone who can do the job well.
@maryamcoco3683 Жыл бұрын
lol yeah opposite indeed!
@sophias.8323 Жыл бұрын
Hello! How is it the opposite?
@딸기-y3u10 ай бұрын
@@sophias.8323i think it’s because radiologists rarely do patient interactions
@margaretbenne Жыл бұрын
From an ED doctor who is adept at uncovering the underlying misery in people's lives that really brings them to the ED, bravo for the tactic you took in dissecting out what really interested you from all your experiences. The physical complaints that bring them to acute medical attention are not often not the main cause for their suffering but the final straw that has piled onto a psychological and/ or social morass that brings them to the breaking point. You've done the hard work of discovering your passion. The next five years will be a worthwhile journey of learning how to able to use it to help heal others. Good luck. P.S. The way you owned the critical care doc looking for the antipsychotic order on the comatose patient was golden. You have the makings of being a kick ass, no nonsense psychiatrist.
@seeker296 Жыл бұрын
"they have to live inside their mind for the rest of their life, and I wanted to make that a better place for them" so poignantly spoken. As a fellow aspiring psychiatrist, I feel that but never expressed it. You brought tears.
@jacobnieves7728 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing! I'm starting med school in a couple of months and your videos have been psyching me up! I love how the pre-med/med school world is starting to trend away from "I need to do what I think everyone else thinks I should do" to "I'm going to follow my passion and interests". Thanks for all you do!
@thelostremainunfound Жыл бұрын
As someone who is only alive because of mental health treatment and psychiatric medicine, I am so happy to see someone passionate going into the field. A passionate NP was the first person to understand that I needed help when I didn't know how to put it into words. I know that medications for mental illness can get a bad rap, especially when someone is on multiple, but it really does work. I suffered for so, so long because of a doctor unwilling to put me on more than one medication at a time. I am now on three meds directly related to my mental well being and I have never done better. Funny enough, a medication I had tried and been taken off of is one that I am on again now because when combined with the other two, I do fantastic on it. There are a bonus two other meds I am on that are categorized as a psych drug but I just have them because of my sleep issues xD. I hope you're able to find the balance that works for the patients you will help! The relationship I have with my provider is so special to me because I know how much she cares about me and I can see her in you when I watch your videos. I have no doubt that you will help give people like myself their joy back
@tum_tums Жыл бұрын
I'm a nurse and whenever i hear "I want to help people" I always think: how. How are you wanting to help people? Through palliative, helping those that are dying? Critical care, those at their most vulnerable? through surgery, those at their most, pardon the pun, open? Like the How is as important as the why. I'm so glad you found the specialty for you! It's a part of medicine people don't realize matters a lot. I mean I'm in clinical research, I love helping people have an opportunity for treatment that they'd never have and helping push new evidence based medicine. I also loved my time in crirical care. It's abiout finding out the how where you find where you belong.
@ststevenau8 ай бұрын
Underrated and super helpful part was listing your meaningful interactions. Just what I needed to hear right now as I refresh my own career path (Australian pursuing clinical psychology).
@edgirl3115 Жыл бұрын
3rd year subspecialty gunner struggling too. I’m in a rural area with no psychiatrist. My US school essentially abandons us after 2nd year. I worked for nine months to get a psych rotation in a city 1 hour drive away and I didn’t really understand why until I heard your thoughts. I realize that my persistence has boiled down to wanting joy for my patients. I want them to know someone cares about them beyond bleeding out or their lipids. I want my patients to have joy and security and happiness in their own minds Thanks for sharing, best of luck. If you have any rotation recommendations, please share . Currently have 54 VSLO apps for psych and neurology pending and am feeling lost- but a little less lost after watching your video.
@aleksg.5212 Жыл бұрын
You're going to be a great psychiatrist, and your co-residents are going to love you : ) I had a similar path to psychiatry myself and have no regrets.
@yagirlzee9 ай бұрын
this was so inspiring and beautifully worded! i’m pre-med and people (like my family) are always a bit concerned when I say I want to do psychiatry lol but I resonated a lot with what you said here. wishing you the best!!
@sforrest1010 ай бұрын
I’ve been a nurse for 12 years and was a social worker for 7 years prior to nursing school. you will have a very long successful career in psychiatry, you are literally perfect for it.
@Chiiyaam Жыл бұрын
2:10 I almost cried, at times I feel like doesn't matter how good life gets, If the mind isn't right or doesn't have good thought or is constantly bombarded with negative thoughts, No place in the world will make one happy.
@chungkuanglin Жыл бұрын
I thought (guessed) you were going into surgery. Best of luck on your psych journey, definitely a great field with much need!
@aaronjoseph7635 Жыл бұрын
Hey man, I just got into med school but was deferred a year. So I have a whole year to start and I’m just anxiously waiting because all I want to do is start. Your videos by far have been one of the most grounding things and have definitely made me less anxious about starting school and just making the most of this year before I start.
@fulltimeslackerii8229 Жыл бұрын
enjoy your free time. you won’t get it back for another 7+ years
@aaronjoseph7635 Жыл бұрын
I know but it’s okay I’m ready for it.
@naima96736 ай бұрын
As an aspiring psychiatrist, this hit the mark. I could really see myself in you, your rationale was so beautifully put together! Thank you.
@tayhawkins9235 Жыл бұрын
This was absolutely beautiful. I’m so glad you’re going into that field with such compassion. This online auntie is rooting for you! ❤
@danielbensen6248 Жыл бұрын
Its been difficult for me lately (senior year college pre-med) as I've been drastically overthinking what I want to do in medicine and why. I feel like I keep getting caught up in the flashiness of stuff like surgical subspecialties, etc., but what you said really resonated. What I love most is exploring the human psyche, and the human soul. Its why I love art and the humanities so much as well. But my Dad has worked his whole career in mental health (Clinical Psychologist for the VA), and has told me so many times not to pursue it. I feel compromised, because on one hand I value his judgement so much, but I also feel like psychiatry is something I'd have a real gift for. Anyways, I appreciate your words, and your honesty about your journey and the honest reflections youve done. I know I have a long time before I need to make my decision, but knowing there are other people out there who have struggled in similar ways and found the right choice is reassuring
@Matthew-lj2zf Жыл бұрын
What was your father’s reasoning as a psychologist for you not to pursue psychiatry?
@misteratoz Жыл бұрын
About to be an attending... I'm proud of you man!
@kelminak2992 Жыл бұрын
As I'm wrapping up my intern year psych I'll only tell you one thing: You made the right choice dude.
@CheeseLoversUnited Жыл бұрын
this is a bit of an aside to the main point of this video, but you mentioned enjoying the process of interviewing psych patients . I find psychiatric assessment has been one of my favorite skills to develop as a psych nurse. Since its so wide ranging a skillset, i feel like im constantly learning new things from patients. I've been lucky that the two specialities I've worked at the beginning of my career have been settings + populations where the assessment process has unique challenges/learning curves, and it's helped me get comfortable with failing and taking risks, which I feel have ultimately made me better overall. (inpatient child/adolescent psych and ER crisis mental health. Let me tell you, nothing will make you see that humour can be a clinical tool than these two areas) I feel like psych assessment engages my brain in both practical/sciencey/concrete skill based ways, but also in philosophical ways. Exploring the nature of a pt's suicidality with them is an example of something that's both a skill and also a conversation about values and philosophy. (I'll hold back my rant about the concept of "risk assessment" here...) I never feel so focused/like I'm firing on so many cylinders as when I'm interviewing a patient. The ability to simply stay fully mentally present with someone who is suffering immensely feels like it is taking all myself sometimes. And distancing myself from the intensity of the moment can be so tempting. "Being present" is a bit of a nebulous, subjective concept, but nonetheless I feel for many patients, most people cannot be present with them in their worst pain, and that's a very lonely place to be. So in this way "being fully mentally present" is a skill that makes me better at the nuts and bolts of the work, but is also about demonstrating to someone you are on their side for real and are prepared to sit in the worst moments with them the vast majority of doctors I've worked with have been great or at the worst fine, I will also say that psychiatrists are generally another reason I enjoy and chose specialty While the kind of burnout psychiatry can lead to is often looks a little different than with medical specialties.... The body keeps the score and that's not only true for our patients -- secondary/vicarious trauma is a real risk of the job. Finding what anchors and balances you, finding where your limits are and setting boundaries around these things is going to be as important as anything else you learn/develop in training, imo. Take care of yourself. good luck!
@szxnv Жыл бұрын
appreciate u sharing ur experience, great to see personally authentic content as well as the comedic stuff :)
@HolisticCNM Жыл бұрын
This was beautiful, Preston. I'm a nurse-midwife and found you on tiktok. It's clear that your emotional intelligence, perceptiveness, and wonderful sense of humor are going to make you a gifted psychiatrist. :)
@cepineda Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing and being open about your journey. The world is gaining a great psychiatrist! Keep up the great work. - a recovering surgeon :)
@reedaserafi46086 ай бұрын
as a medical student interested in psych thank you so much you worded this perfectly this comes to probe that it’s not about the length of videos rather than the content
@paulpaul3519 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for an honest reflection on your journey! I graduate in a couple weeks and your skits have been a great distraction from the gloom of residency around the corner. Keep up the vids man!
@s-lcd Жыл бұрын
I say this from the bottom of my heart. Thank you for all your videos. They really help me with medschool and in general with life. I'm so glad I found you.😊
@danielkulinich4761 Жыл бұрын
Same here man! Neurosurgery to Psych, pulled the switch this year. Stoked to start residency
@asdfasdf6299 Жыл бұрын
4th year Ortho gunner here. I feel you, but I really like Ortho so FML. Thanks for keeping it real my man.
@itspresro Жыл бұрын
Ortho is cool. You got it bro
@Crazydude409 Жыл бұрын
I started making a stupid comment because clearly Preston do be a funny boy but seriously I'm so happy you've found what you love to do. I know you're gonna be incredible and you're really gonna help people. If you need a test subject I would love to help lmfao. Sincerely the loyal sun setters estates folks
@spongerobroundpants470 Жыл бұрын
I've been following your stuff throughout my 4th year and I've found all of it incredibly insightful. I just matched anesthesiology but choosing that over psychiatry was more difficult than I could've imagined. Your ability to grasp and digest a situation has made your content great, but understanding the feelings behind those situations will make you a great shrink. Congratulations and I wish you luck over the next four years!
@itspresro Жыл бұрын
Thanks man, my best friend is doing anesthesiology. It’s a great field!
@serenataserenata26319 ай бұрын
Med student here. Firstly I wanted to say thank you for this video. I am thinking of pursuing psychiatry too. A reason I rarely say to people as to why I want to select this specialty is that for me, mental health is more important than any organic disorder. I feel that what I care more about is for people to have quality of life, and not just life. And I believe that enhancing human experience is something that lies on a very large scale to our feelings towards a situation, and not the situation itself. I am not in any way disrespecting the hardship that a human with cancer goes through. But what moves my heart is to see people with many organic problems valuing their experience, having will to live, which is closely to unbelievable in some circumstances. And of course I understand from personal experience the internal psychological hardships that someone with seemingly no problems in their life may endure silently. My hope and my will is to give treat to mental health disorders, to assess and improve in any way thoughts, feelings and behavior that are for me the essence of human experience.
@Tor367 Жыл бұрын
Hi from Sweden. Love your videos Preston, they bring joy during some really long days and especially interesting to hear more about you. Looking forward too follow you on your path. Best of luck and I know you will do great.
@At76812 Жыл бұрын
Dude I saw your EM resident video first and didn’t think for one second you were messing around! It just hit me you made a joke about psych residents! You’re awesome brother I wish you a great career!
@peckerhead1038 Жыл бұрын
I truly appreciate your honesty, your openness, and your vulnerability, man! Thank you for sharing your experience in this video. I myself am Bi-Polar, and I too love helping others through a combination of talk therapy as well as through the medication side. Our minds are very precious and knowing that we are going to be living within our own mind for the rest of our lives, like you similarly explained, is very powerful. If you are able to help someone fundamentally feel better about themselves, the perspective, how the experience life through a lense of joy, happiness, optimism, and gratitude, than that is a true honor, gift, and blessing! Thank you again for this video, very much!
@DrRRaza Жыл бұрын
love it, man, I believe you summed it up perfectly, that is exactly how i feel about psychiatry
@awabmasaad8362 Жыл бұрын
Happy for you Preston, I wish I reach that spot where I know what is my passion. It feels like a life goal to me rn, because I keep telling myself that finding my passion is all what it takes for outstanding career. I'm about to finish my 4th in med school in UAE (one last year to go), I did Medicine I, Peds, Gyne and about to finish Surgery I and I doesn't feel like I found my passion. It makes me doubt if medicine was the right choice in the beginning.
@Hamza-li7nq Жыл бұрын
Hey Preston, love these little serious videos too in addition to the skits, keep'em coming!
@abefromansausagekingofchic6480 Жыл бұрын
Congrats on finishing med school! It sounds like you put a lot of thought into it and chose what would truly make you happy. You're going to be a great psychiatrist. Camera looks great btw
@mashajohns78109 ай бұрын
So awesome to see your enthusiasm for psychiatry !
@kaciegriffith5946 Жыл бұрын
Man I relate to this so strongly. I was pretty set on FM because I loved the patient relationships in primary care and the variety of conditions we see. Eventually I also realized my absolute favorite patient interactions were ones that addressed the psychosocial influences on the patients’ health. So I applied and matched family medicine/psychiatry and I think it will be the perfect combination for me. I’m so glad you were able to pause and reevaluate your experiences and desires. The fact that you were so self-aware and receptive enough to make such a drastic change indicates that you will be a fantastic psychiatrist. Good luck!
@marinal2705 Жыл бұрын
This was a really powerful video, thank you for sharing :) I'm about to finish M1 and it's always really interesting to see how people who are a few years ahead of me learn, grow and develop into physicians. Makes it really tangible to see how different med school years can heavily impact and shape who you will become. Good luck to you and pls keep making videos, they are such a breath of fresh air and I get a laugh every time!
@peterqazify Жыл бұрын
Thank you for posting about this. I am a third year medical student and I was also previously gunning for a subspecialty until I realized I loved talking to patients, hearing their stories, and finding ways support patients back to their definition of returning to normalcy, and ultimately found psych to hit all those marks. Inspired by your content both in funny or serious ways and would love to see more of this reflective-type videos throughout your experience in residency
@rachellllhines8 ай бұрын
I love this, i have wanted to do psych since day one of med school but seeing how psych seeps into literally every specialty, bc psych is everything about our lives. i wanted to be involved in my patients lives, their joys and pain, and sorrows, and achievements and psych is the only field where it is celebrated to be this invested in our patients lives
@danielag.29085 ай бұрын
You're going to be amazing! Congratulations! 🎉❤
@tali3425 Жыл бұрын
I have questions… 1. I often hear psychiatrists state at the largest mental institutions are jails, however, psychiatric hospitals are modeled after jails…. Except that in jail you have rights… how do you defend the involuntary indefinite commitment of people in jail like settings when at least in jail, they have a set release date? What about alternatives to psych wards like peer support groups? 2. Why is it that you are allowed to refuse antibiotics, but you are not allowed to refuse psychiatric medication? Also, when you are involuntarily committed, they make you sign paperwork anyways that says that it’s OK to treat…. And then they bill you for unwanted services? Why is that ethical? 3. BIPOC are more likely to be labeled as schizophrenic and are more likely to be given harmful medication’s than other groups of people. why is it OK to discriminate against them? 4. Why is medication considered the default answer to societal problems when a lot of this is due to poverty and inequities? 5. Human rights are routinely, violated, and people stripped of their dignity and autonomy. They are also asked insanely personal questions, and if you try to deny them, then the psychiatrist says you are lying. Why does the psychiatric interview have to be set up like a cop interviewing a criminal? And why dont patients have access to lawyers who can protect them from the doctor? 6. Why aren’t patients given any sort of choices to collaborate on what they are comfortable doing? Because if they don’t, they are routinely threatened with either restraints, or medication or they are denied “privliledges” 7. Why is it OK to abuse people in institutions, and why do you want people institutionalized? 8. ECT- why on earth, would you want someone to be a living vegetable that doesn’t sound so ethical that kind of reminds me of the book one flew over the cuckoo’s nest. 9. Abusive guardianship/conservatorships even Britney Spears is not immune to this unethical treatment. 10. Why does the human experience need to be medicalized. Sometimes people go through traumatic experiences and it’s OK to be sad. There is something that is inherently dehumanizing by using a medical model to reduce human experience to a DSM “criteria” 11. Have you ever taken a peek at Reddit and looked at the psychiatry sub Reddit? You should see how psychiatrists speak about patients it is so dehumanizing. With the often fraught and abusive history of psychiatry, not much has changed. Why is it ok to slap a label on people and abuse them? 12. Psychiatric care is not trauma informed because if you don’t answer personal questions than it is presumed that you lack capacity. Don’t you think it’s wrong to try to force a narrow set of behavioral expectations on everyone and then punish those that don’t fall into that category? 13. Most private psychiatric hospitals routinely make people try to stay longer if they have lucrative insurance? Don’t you think that’s wrong? What about the hierarchical authoritarian structures of psych words don’t you realize that most people are scared of you in the psych ward and will just tell you whatever you want to hear so they can go free? Psych words don’t stop suicide. In fact, you are more likely to commit suicide right after a psychiatric discharge. Also, don’t you think it’s kind of degrading to try to make a patientS “earn” back their clothing, and make them undergo invasive strip searches? I just don’t understand the point there is nothing that is humane about those places. 14. Different cultures have different opinions on everything whenever it comes to things like abortion, or euthanasia, or suicide why is it that psychiatrists try to make everything into a Solely Americanized/westernized point of view? 15. Conflict of interest and big Pharma routinely, drug reps for lavish psychiatrists with fancy gifts and what not in order to get them to try to prescribe I get that medication they can even track how much medication is prescribed through insurance claims. How is it that psychiatrists are OK pushing these types of pills on people whenever they are literally getting kickbacks from the pharmaceutical companies to do it? These pills aren’t harmless. For example, the antipsychotics and weight gain and if you have metabolic dysfunction. … thats serious
@usurum489810 ай бұрын
explains how you get the time to make those videos!! big respect though, by far one of these specialties I appreciate but could never go for. You guys have even more resilience than the average doctor
@PepsiT98 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this :') as a 4th year also interested in psych, a lot of these points hit home for me; when residents/attendings in other specialties scoffed and groaned at a new psych case/visit, those were the patients I gravitated towards.
@SG-gw5xo Жыл бұрын
Love you Preston! You've verbalized everything I feel about psychiatry and I look forward to you becoming my psych colleague in the future!
@lovinlife786 Жыл бұрын
You're very insightful and I wish you the best in your journey in medicine. I hope you always keep this passion and joy. Come back to this video whenever you feel low xoxo
@rainofsunshine473 Жыл бұрын
man thank you so much for this video! i'm a very confused incoming med student and really appreciate your perspective
@alexjamesfilms3026 Жыл бұрын
hey man, congrats on being at the end of school and I hope you find great fulfillment during this next part of your journey man :) you are gonna be a great psych doc. just remember to be nice to us nurses cause we need each other!
@bootsmade4walking Жыл бұрын
I need that “/serious” tone marker because I keep expecting every video to be a joke 😂😭 loving all your content! ❤️ keeping going!
@NiklasRunkel Жыл бұрын
Hey, :) I relate strongly to what you said in this video and just want to say that I love what you are doing and why! In my limited clinical experience, the doctors that I admired the most and that I felt helped patients the most were doctors like you (though from different specialties). Doctors who didn‘t just take a look at their patients through the door for two seconds a day but, even though they were stressed, told them a joke or just smiled at them when they walked in. Doctors who took their patients‘ emotional reality seriously. Thank you for this real video!
@lulu_8615 Жыл бұрын
I’m a premed looking to do psychiatry, and then specifically training to become a psychoanalyst. Analysis is pretty marginal in psychology and psychiatry atm with the dominance of the neurobio model, but I think it’s really valuable in conjunction with the pharmacological aspects of psychiatry. also, psychoanalysis is really useful for thinking about mental health (subjectivity in analysis speak) in political terms imo. All medicine is political in the sense that it deals with people who themselves and their ailments are shaped by social structures, but in psychiatry you really get up close and person to these realities. At least the type of analysis I’m interested in makes these connections explicit.
@nataliestitak4915 Жыл бұрын
I am a history teacher, not anywhere close to medicine. 😂 But, I came across your channel and your videos are hilarious! I am the type of person who still gets scared going to the doctor. But, your channel and Dr. Mike's Channel have given me a lot of peace of mind and you guys make me laugh!! And yes! I love my psychiatrist! Psychiatrists are amazing and I admire what you guys do!!
@jt3013 Жыл бұрын
Love your videos, and love your earnestness. Congrats on the decision and godspeed in residency!
@mauz791 Жыл бұрын
Perfectly said, it's wonderful you found out your passion
@Bubbjacoba Жыл бұрын
I just finished M1 year, not sure about what I want to go into yet but I love your videos! Keep it up and congrats on graduating!
@jgenddd Жыл бұрын
I'm also a recovering sub specialty gunner now about to finish medicine residency. Leaving a subspecialty residency for medicine was the best decision I ever made. Do what you love, not what other people love for you. Good luck and stay well in residency
@labeebahmad9690 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for making this, you’re a nice genuine guy with good insight
@labeebahmad9690 Жыл бұрын
And your videos are so funnny!!
@itspresro Жыл бұрын
Thank you!!
@Percipitate Жыл бұрын
Ayyyyy! HUGE welcome to Psychiatry, Preston! :) R2 here and love your skits!
@bell108779 ай бұрын
I love the tone of this youtube. It gives more of a sense of what you are like as a psychiatrist..and may i say- it is a really good vibe. Now this was posted 10 months ago, how do you feel about it now? I don't mean to plug another youtube, but Preston, you may find the channel Goertzpsychiatry interesting , he looks like a senior psychiatrist and alot of his channel is about being a psychiatrist.... 😊 forgive me if mentioning another channel is bothersome. I love how you say that we have to live inside our nind for the rest of our life and gow you feel about that and what yout motivations and interests are in psychiatry. I basically love this youtube post of yours the MOST! 😊
@marcosamuelfabus1044 Жыл бұрын
I've greatly enjoyed your comedic content but I really appreciate you sharing this more personal and serious message:)
@saloniiii2710 Жыл бұрын
I look up to you. Sending best wishes!
@DM-lt3zu10 ай бұрын
You‘re awesome! I think I want to go into psych too and I related so much to a lot what you said, although I’m still at the start of uni.
@jarrettleto Жыл бұрын
I had a rotation at a psych/internal med combined program and I know how you feel. A lot of varied and interesting cases and dealing with a wide range of medications as well. Good luck, youll do great!
@Omar-xg3lm Жыл бұрын
I started in IM and left after a year and went into Psychiatry. Best decision of my life.
@HuxleysShaggyDog4 ай бұрын
I'm actually seriously considering a psychiatrist. I'm pushing 40 and in a non medical technical field. I want to help people who need it the most, and are the most vulnerable, and in my experience that has been people in psych wards - because of how the psych ward is treating them, as much as what put them there. I've been a treatment abuse advocate for the last 20 years. My first run in with treatment abuse was in elementary school. How do you deal with what we both know goes on when you're not present, and for that matter, having to hold people who really don't want to be held, but really do need to be there?
@AEasterly Жыл бұрын
Hi Preston. I always enjoy your content. Premed career switcher here, so naturally I search a lot of medical content and the algorithm threw me one of your videos - and I'm glad it did! I think there is a lot of strength in sharing inner thoughts and vulnerabilities, but also can cause apprehension (especially online), so it's pretty admirable that you shared a little bit about who you are with all of us. Thanks for the great content & best of luck!!
@carolinebjerkelund76711 ай бұрын
I have PTSD. I have talked to a few psychiatrists. Not one of them helped me. Actually they made it worse for me. I hope you can do better with people, with what you chose to do in life.
@andrewbarrett2333 Жыл бұрын
lol love your videos, but at first, I didnt know whether to think this was a sketch or for real. all the best on the journey!
@christaing12019 ай бұрын
hello i appreciate your passionate take on psychiatry. im currently waiting on dental school admissions but i’m finding that mental health ties to it and im finding many reasons to go into it as well.
@angrycrow9261 Жыл бұрын
I feel this for the most part. I had one incredible psych attending and one that was on a bit of a power trip, which kinda scared me away. Also had some patients that had some scary situations on inpatient, and was like "I like this, but I can't handle the stress of being so totally in control of someone's life." In other specialties, a competant patient has a say in their care. In psych (and in peds, which also deterred me from that) they don't always.
@itspresro Жыл бұрын
The “paternalistic” aspects of those fields are terrifying and important. I would hope that no one wants to be in control of someone else’s life and I agree it is stressful to have that responsibility. It’s a good thing to know about yourself
@cblank777 Жыл бұрын
From seeing your skits I could tell you were interested in psych...happy for you man your videos are hilarious but like this serious style video also !!
@hakonaskjerlien Жыл бұрын
Hard agree on what are the best parts of the job. Tried psych for a year after med school. Now in family medicine/gp (norwegian equivalent at least), with this field scoring even better for me on exactly those parameters. Things to keep in mind, Prest!
@itspresro Жыл бұрын
Thank you! And definitely - I could easily see myself in family medicine or internal med
@swingtheB Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing. I’m not in the medical field at all, but love your videos.
@m136dalie Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing. It's nice to hear about the person behind the videos. I'm also final year but thankfully in Australia we don't have to commit to a speciality until much later (usually PGY3). I also prefer the human interactions in medicine, could never do a speciality where I wasn't regularly interacting with patients.
@geoffreydouglas7043 Жыл бұрын
I was kind of hoping you'd choose a surgical field. We need your energy in our ranks. But it is selfish for me to want you to do what I want you to do. Thanks for sharing your process. Congratulations on the next step in your career.
@robertrowland700 Жыл бұрын
Love the channel bro, thanks for the reflection
@filippopigani9312 Жыл бұрын
Hi Preston! A sixth year medical student who's going to apply for Psych here in Italy. Thanks for sharing your motivations❤
@itspresro Жыл бұрын
Of course! I look forward to being your colleague
@nomorebroscience7755 Жыл бұрын
You definitely pulled off the EM persona so well. Thought for sure with your trauma shear quick draw time you'd be going into EM.
@greggb681 Жыл бұрын
Preston, I love this video! I can tell that you are truly passionate about psychiatry
@EmmanuelLebanon Жыл бұрын
Hello from one year in the future. Putting gunning behind me was the best decision I ever made. Everyone else from my Med IV cohort is still pursuing research to secure some prestigious residency whereas I'm about to start PGY2. When you enter residency people will start obsessing over money (understandably); don't listen to them or they will push you back into gunning for whatever reason. The differences in salaries between specialties do not matter in the grand scheme of things; it's the same lifestyle no matter where you end up.
@escandaloso9052 Жыл бұрын
You inspire me! Congratulations!! I love your content
@hanch96 Жыл бұрын
I have no idea why for so long I resisted peds when it was so obviously deep down “the one”and it was so freeing to just give in to it. So much pressure on the “right” choice and what your specialty choice signifies about who you are and whatever and feels good to just give up on others’ criteria and pick what feels fun
@exchurchmouse9 ай бұрын
Wonderful video. I am considering working in the behavioral health field.
@chroniccougherhaha5420 Жыл бұрын
this is really cool and i'm so glad that you found something that you were passionate about and weren't too scared to change plans last minute and change to something that will make you super happy. that actually took a lot of bravery and i know that it will definitely pay off for you in the future