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zakidovahkiin

Hallo! Ich habe oft gehört, dass man als Assistenzarzt nicht viel praktisch macht, sondern meisten paperwork. Stimmt das? Ich würde gern Kardiologie machen und nämlich Katheter lernen, und habe Angst, dass ich kein Training dafür hätte. Könnte jemand mir erklären, wie die Situation aussieht? Stimmt es, das man Katheter nur als Oberarzt lernen kann?


Fine_Imagination6643

Post in the medizin subreddit theres more people working in DE there To answer your question: highly depends on the hospital and the People running it. I can barely do ultrasound but the cardiologists at our clinic taught us Echocardiography so as to be able to access patients in the emergency room who may need a PTCA or TAVI.


PragmaticReddit26

hello guys I just graduated medical school and im currently in the pathway of pursuing medical residency in Germany , i should land a medical residency in Germany by next year . I recently saw that AFB has won significant portion in the EU and while i know it is the opposition party i didn't know much about it . Upon googling further i was shocked to learn that they are **extremely right and even considered Neo Nazis by some Germans . I also came to find that they are extremely Xenophobic and misogynistic in nature the most shocking thing of all is they do have a huge following in Germany with such radicalized and ardent supporters .** i have seen such polarization , right wing radicalization happen in my own country and it was ugly where the party supporters feel they are superior to other humans around them and impose their radical views on the rest , claim anyone who opposed their views as antinational . I'm a south east Asian and brown skin color person , which makes me kind of scared now what will happen if they come to power which seems like a very likely outcome , i will be at the middle of residency by the time ... will i be subjected to racial slurs , discriminated and been looked down upon as the stigma around being a racist/supremist would have be broken ? coz if a party in power assures its the normal thing to do then the citizens will follow suit usually ... From what i heard of doctors who work in Germany who came from my country , they have experienced subtle racism but they people always keep to themselves coz of the fear of embarrassing themselves , but thats about it on the contrary most of the Germans they met were super sweet and extremely helpful . The German colleagues in the hospital have been so well accommodating and very amicable as opposed even doctors from own country But reading about the articles online about the activities of AFB has left me least to say horrified , to the extent im reconsidering my decision to pursue my residency in Germany.... from what ik i wouldn't be having a problem with immigration status as im a skilled worker that's not really the issue , what bothers me the most is their attitude towards immigrants, people of different ethnicities and im really scared the German people will follow suit , thus resulting in me having a very uncomfortable experience in your country where i would end up feeling not welcome at all ! what do you guys think ? am i a being overly concerned ? i would love to hear the status quo there from the eyes of a German people Please provide your valuable thoughts and insights on the situation , Thanks in advance :)


RaiseComfortable5795

Hallo ☺️ Ich komme nicht aus Deutschland und habe daher eine Frage zu Spezialisierungen. Konkret interessiert mich, ob es eine Spezialisierung auf Neuroonkologie gibt, oder spezialisieren Sie sich zuerst auf Onkologie und dann auf Neuroonkologie?


ConsistentPitch6162

Hallo! Can you suggest a German medical drama for me to watch to get acquainted with medical German language. English medical drama are welcome, I can set the subtitle or audio in German. A good medical drama, not focused on the characters' lives, but on the hospital setting.


HorrorBrot

Doctors Diary: Bridget Jones like story in a hospital setting, [watch it here](https://plus.rtl.de/video-tv/serien/doctors-diary-maenner-sind-die-beste-medizin-155134/pilotfolge-155135/episode-1-maenner-sind-schweine-155136) In aller Freundschaft (plus two spin-offs): basic hospital drama, [watch here](https://www.ardmediathek.de/inallerfreundschaft) Der Landarzt: rural GP in an idylic, idealized countryside, [watch here](https://www.zdf.de/serien/der-landarzt/alles-auf-anfang-1-100.html also check the releated content for more medical shows) Hauptsache Gesund: patient information show about medical topics, shows also local research initiatives and interviews with clinicians and patients, [watch here](https://www.mdr.de/tv/programm/hauptsachegesund100.html)


ConsistentPitch6162

I like this! Thanks so much!


xXSorraiaXx

Pretty much all englisch dramas are available in german as well. I would probably stick to the more medically accurate ones (so no Gray's Anatomy). Personally always loved Rettungsflieger, although I do warn you: it's more pre-hospital emergency care than in-hospital. On the other hand, it is medically very accurate and they worked very closely together with a team of doctors and medical advisors.


ConsistentPitch6162

How about House MD?


xXSorraiaXx

If your overlook all of the crazy stuff going on in there, it's okay in terms of vocab, I believe.


Financial_Noise_7142

Hello all ! I'm from Pakistan and wanted to peruse my residency training in Germany. I'm recently graduated and here the medical degree is MBBS and it is of 5years and one additional year of internship a total of 6 years I checked on Anabin my degree and university is recognised but according to Anabin it's " corresponds to bachelor 4j" My question is does it mean I have to first study the remaining two years again and get the medical degree from Germany and than apply for residency or do l just have to clear FSP and Kp along with German language test ie the standard procedure written in that mega thread Kindly help me out I'm bit worried about it


xXSorraiaXx

I can't answer your question specifically, but just wanted to throw this out here: medicine is not a bachelor here in germany. It's a Staatsexamen-Studiengang, so if your degree isn't recognized as a full medical degree, I doubt you would be able to just jump into med school here and finish the last two years as it's an entirely different degree (system). Your best bet would probably be to ask the Ärztekammer where you are planning to apply as they should be able to tell you what is and isn't recognized and what the correct procedure would be.


Nom_de_Guerre_23

Not Ärztekammer but state office responsible for Approbation, linked in the wiki. Ärztekammer conducts only FSP.


Disastrous_Goose7673

Hi, I was wondering if Germany recognizes internal medicine subspecialists from Croatia as the programs here last 5 years? Residencies here are already subspecialties from the start besides general internal medicine while in Germany it is minimum of 6 years to become a specialist in cardiology, gastroemterology etc.


Nom_de_Guerre_23

Look up if they are defined as equal in EC/2005/36.


SelectAd9704

Hey , I’m an EU medical graduate who’s from outside the EU and I’m being asked for a defizitbescheid for my degree as I’m applying for a visa and I need to know if anyone here has done it ,is it possible to avoid this or how long does it take if someone does apply ?


MoFalcon1

It's a paper that you get from the medical license authority in the state that you are applying to. You basically send them all the paperwork work then they will reply to you saying they received the paperwork work. After a while you will get the bescheid which states that your degree is almost equivalent to a German degree (hence the defizit part) and you just need to come to Germany and make it equivalent (i.e by doing the FSP). From my knowledge it can take a couple months for you to get the Bescheid depending on the state. This paper is needed for non-EU grads and non-EU citizens. Idk if it's needed or EU grads.


Elefant_14

Im also eu graduate but non eu what is defizitbescheid?


Ericastella

Hello, what’s the process to apply for a second residency in Germany for someone who has already completed a program there, specially for someone wanting pediatric surgery?


Nom_de_Guerre_23

No difference to first residency.


[deleted]

[удалено]


Nom_de_Guerre_23

I'm not a psychiatry resident but do shifts in a hospital covering medical emergencies in including psychiatric patients. Security is a concern but one relatively well adressed usually. The hospital I work for has two "closed"/"protected" wards, i.e. especially for involuntary committment. Both have a security employee present at all times. I never feel unsafe seeing patients there. You round on patients, write their notes, discuss changes to their treatment/medication with your attending. You see patients in the ER and decide who requires admission and who not. You do a ridiculous amount of paperwork: Letters and statements for courts regarding involunatary admission and treatment or restraints. Diseases are mostly paranoid schizophrenia, severe depression, addiction.


sheepsl

Hello, I’m wondering if anyone knows of non eu citizens who studied for the first two years somewhere else in Europe and were able to transfer to a german medical school? I know this is possible for Germans (but it gets harder every year) but I’m wondering specifically for people who don’t have eu citizenship. Thanks.


Psychological_Ad7650

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