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Mariam Naveed, MD, opened a discussion in the Early Career Group forum in AGA Community that invited GIs to share how or when they knew which career path was the best fit. Among those sharing their stories were Peter Liang, MD, MPH; Avinash Ketwaroo, MD; Maisa Abdalla, MD, MPH; Tara Altepeter, MD; Elliot Tapper, MD; and Brijen Shah, MD. Their expertise spans across the GI spectrum, including academia, research, drug development, and regulatory science.
For Dr. Liang, the key to succeeding on the research path is to be passionate about your topic(s), enjoy reading and writing, and be able to accept constructive criticism and rejection. Dr. Altepeter encourages all GIs early in their career to be open to exploring a variety of career options, as regulatory science was not a career path she was aware of at the beginning of training.
The conversation continued when trainee and early career members brought their career-specific questions, including the possibility of achieving tenure without publishing.
View a summary of advice shared at http://community.gastro.org/calling. The discussions around finding your GI calling are in the AGA Community Early Career Group, at http://community.gastro.org/EarlyCareerGroup.
Mariam Naveed, MD, opened a discussion in the Early Career Group forum in AGA Community that invited GIs to share how or when they knew which career path was the best fit. Among those sharing their stories were Peter Liang, MD, MPH; Avinash Ketwaroo, MD; Maisa Abdalla, MD, MPH; Tara Altepeter, MD; Elliot Tapper, MD; and Brijen Shah, MD. Their expertise spans across the GI spectrum, including academia, research, drug development, and regulatory science.
For Dr. Liang, the key to succeeding on the research path is to be passionate about your topic(s), enjoy reading and writing, and be able to accept constructive criticism and rejection. Dr. Altepeter encourages all GIs early in their career to be open to exploring a variety of career options, as regulatory science was not a career path she was aware of at the beginning of training.
The conversation continued when trainee and early career members brought their career-specific questions, including the possibility of achieving tenure without publishing.
View a summary of advice shared at http://community.gastro.org/calling. The discussions around finding your GI calling are in the AGA Community Early Career Group, at http://community.gastro.org/EarlyCareerGroup.
Mariam Naveed, MD, opened a discussion in the Early Career Group forum in AGA Community that invited GIs to share how or when they knew which career path was the best fit. Among those sharing their stories were Peter Liang, MD, MPH; Avinash Ketwaroo, MD; Maisa Abdalla, MD, MPH; Tara Altepeter, MD; Elliot Tapper, MD; and Brijen Shah, MD. Their expertise spans across the GI spectrum, including academia, research, drug development, and regulatory science.
For Dr. Liang, the key to succeeding on the research path is to be passionate about your topic(s), enjoy reading and writing, and be able to accept constructive criticism and rejection. Dr. Altepeter encourages all GIs early in their career to be open to exploring a variety of career options, as regulatory science was not a career path she was aware of at the beginning of training.
The conversation continued when trainee and early career members brought their career-specific questions, including the possibility of achieving tenure without publishing.
View a summary of advice shared at http://community.gastro.org/calling. The discussions around finding your GI calling are in the AGA Community Early Career Group, at http://community.gastro.org/EarlyCareerGroup.