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After 12 years as a private practice ob.gyn., Dr. Brigid McCue was beginning to feel overwhelmed. She loved her work, but keeping up with the kaleidoscope of care components and ever-changing clinical developments was daunting.
“I felt like it was hard to stay really good at all the different aspects of care,” Dr. McCue said. “I was doing fine with obstetrics, and I felt like I was managing my office well, but it’s hard to stay on top of the latest developments, especially in surgical areas. The other thing that was really hard to keep up with was the business aspect of medicine and running a private practice.”
So when an opportunity presented itself, Dr. McCue leaped at the chance to narrow her expertise to obstetrical hospital medicine. She helped establish the ob.gyn. hospitalist program at Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital-Plymouth in Massachusetts, and now serves as chief of ob.gyn. and midwifery for the hospital.
“I love the fact that I now have the time to get really good at [what] I really like, [such as] labor and delivery,” said Dr. McCue, who is president of the Society of OB/GYN Hospitalists. “Since I made this change, I feel like I’m so much more on top of things. I do simulations here on my unit over things like shoulder dystocia. When I was in private practice, I would go to one meeting a year and pray that I never had a shoulder dystocia [case]. Now I really understand the whole process and I take the time to run through that with my midwives and my other nurses and doctors.”
Dr. McCue is one of a growing number of ob.gyns. who have chosen to target their expertise to a single subspecialty or concentrated practice area. Data show subspecialization is on the rise in ob.gyn.
From 1985 to 2015, certificates issued by the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ABOG) for gynecologic oncology nearly tripled, and certificates issued for reproductive endocrinology and infertility more than doubled, according to data provided by the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS). Certificates issued for maternal-fetal medicine rose from 35 in 1985 to 100 in 2015.
Opportunities for ob.gyns. to subspecialize have steadily increased over the last 50 years. The subspecialties of maternal-fetal medicine, gynecologic oncology, and reproductive endocrinology and infertility were first approved for certification by ABOG in 1973. In 1983, ABMS approved a certificate of “added qualification” for ob.gyns. who complete fellowships in critical care. In 1995, ABOG and the American Board of Urology started the subspecialty of female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery, which was approved for certification by ABMS in 2011.
ABMS also approved a certificate of “added qualification” for ob.gyns. who complete a fellowship in hospice and palliative medicine in 2008. And fellowships now exist for minimally invasive gynecologic surgery and ob.gyn. hospital medicine.
The reasons that ob.gyns. choose to subspecialize are multifold, said Dr. Charles E. Miller, a reproductive endocrinologist and minimally invasive gynecologic surgeon in Naperville and Schaumburg, Ill., and one of the medical editors of the Ob.Gyn. News column, Master Class.
“Physicians subspecialize so that they can provide more medical and surgical expertise for a given population,” he said. “Secondly, physicians may be driven to subspecialize for lifestyle reasons. Generalists refer to subspecialists when technical expertise is desired to help with a clinical situation and potentially reduce medical legal risk.”
Ultimately, it’s patients who benefit from the increased care provided by subspecialists, noted Dr. Mark H. Einstein, a gynecologic oncologist and chair of obstetrics, gynecology, and women’s health at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Newark. Generalist ob.gyns. are tremendously knowledgeable and experienced, he said, but there’s no way for them to know every area, he said. It’s the difference between someone who might be doing a complicated surgery one or twice a year versus someone who is doing that surgery once or twice a week, he added.
“That is ultimately helpful for patients,” Dr. Einstein said. “It’s really about outcomes. This is all better for the patient. That’s the most important thing.”
Not every consequence of subspecialization is positive, however.
“As with everything, subspecialization has both positive and negative effects,” said Dr. Sandra Ann Carson, vice president for education at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. “The more time one has to focus on a small area, the better that area becomes. However, if all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail. The larger population may not need the care that someone with a rare disease may need.”
Dr. Miller refers to this challenge as “losing the forest.” He explains that subspecialists sometimes become so focused on their area of expertise, that they may overlook suitable treatment plans with which they are unfamiliar. An infertility specialist, for example, who neglects to consider a minimally invasive surgical procedure that could allow a patient to become pregnant naturally and instead recommends in vitro fertilization treatment.
“The infertility specialist does not have that particular skill and therefore directs that patient to IVF,” Dr. Miller said. “In the process of subspecializing, we have a tendency to lose the forest and look only at the trees.”
Finding a job is another challenge for the growing number of subspecialists. In many cases, fellowship-trained minimally invasive gynecologic surgeons may have to go back to practicing general gynecology because of a lack of positions, Dr. Miller said.
“We have to be careful that we do not “oversubspecialize” so that we are oversaturating the field,” he said.
In the future, the number of ob.gyn subspecialists will likely continue to grow and become more refined, said Dr. Dana M. Chase, a gynecologic oncologist at the University of Arizona Cancer Center in Phoenix.
“I think subspecialists will continue to become more and more developed,” Dr. Chase said. “Perhaps, some areas like family planning or minimally invasive surgery may grow further and become board certified.”
Dr. Carson foresees subspecialization becoming more focused on centralized teaching hospitals, with patients who need special care being sent to these hubs.
“Telemedicine and long-distance communication with a local obstetrician-gynecologist managing the whole patient will allow the best of both worlds,” she said.
Regardless of how subspecialist growth evolves, general ob.gyns. and other primary care physicians will always be needed, said Dr. Mary E. Norton, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist and clinical geneticist at the Fetal Treatment Center at the University of California, San Francisco.
“With increasing complexity, experts are needed to interpret advances,” Dr. Norton said. “However, patients also need a ‘medical home’ and primary provider who sees the big picture, and provides ongoing care beyond a single pregnancy or pregnancy complication.”
Why I chose to subspecialize
“I went to medical school with a particular interest in obstetrics. Once there, I was exposed to pediatrics and to high-risk OB, which I found to be fascinating. I particularly enjoyed my exposure to genetics during my pediatrics rotation and cared for a few children with genetic diseases that had a big impact and made a substantial impression on me. I ultimately decided to pursue an ob.gyn. residency and loved the OB part, particularly the prenatal genetics and high-risk OB. I found the balance of maternal and fetal medicine to be an exciting opportunity to care for two patients. I did an elective in prenatal diagnosis during my third year, including a bit of research, and was hooked.”
Dr. Mary E. Norton, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist and a clinical geneticist at the Fetal Treatment Center at the University of California, San Francisco.
“In my second year of residency, I became really interested in [gynecology-oncology] because I was fascinated by the surgery and interested in the chemotherapy practice, which is interesting because there’s always new research and new agents and interesting changes in how you treat the various cancers. It’s a very comprehensive, research-based field and that was fascinating to me. It’s a very busy subspecialty with very complex cases on multiple levels. You do these radical surgeries but then you have to be really involved in the choice for which chemotherapy agent to use, what type of radiation to give, and you also get really involved with the families ... Every case is so different and you treat women who are 16 years old, but you also treat women who are 96 years old. You see women from all walks of life with all sorts of different issues. The ability to really get involved with cancer research is a great part of the field.”
Dr. Dana M. Chase, a gynecologic oncologist at the University of Arizona Cancer Center, Phoenix.
“I took the opportunity to come to a new program where they were looking for an ob.gyn. hospitalist. That was exciting for me because I got to help establish the program... I feel like we’re a better department because I’m here monitoring labor, but I’m also writing protocols and making sure everyone is up to date. And I still get to do what I love the most, which is birth and babies.”
Dr. Brigid McCue, an ob.gyn. hospitalist and chief of ob.gyn. and midwifery, Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital-Plymouth, Massachusetts.
“I never considered delivering babies for the rest of my life. I was always focused on treating infertile couples. I completed my fellowship in reproductive endocrinology-infertility at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, at a time when in vitro fertilization was in its infancy and the laparoscope and hysteroscope were virtually diagnostic tools ... As IVF became more successful, I felt it was essential to add this expertise to my armamentarium ... It is truly gratifying to be part of a subspecialty that has advanced so far that the majority of our patients are able to achieve pregnancy via IVF.”
Dr. Charles E. Miller, a reproductive endocrinologist and minimally invasive gynecologic surgeon in Naperville and Schaumburg, Ill.
“During medical school, I was very interested in the surgical aspects of patient care. When I rotated in gyn-oncology – now knowing that I rotated with some of the best gyn-oncologists who ever practiced – I found myself drawn to the complexity of surgery, acuity of the patients, and the close relationships gyn-oncologists have with their patients. It hit me like a brick that this was the specialty for me. During my residency and fellowship, I was particularly drawn to the multiple modalities we use to treat cancers. I relished the idea that through clinical trials, gyn-oncologists keep pushing the bar to solve the cancer problem. What we do now is different than what we did 5 years ago. It keeps us professionally challenged all the time.”
Dr. Mark H. Einstein, a gynecologic oncologist and chair of obstetrics, gynecology and women’s health at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Newark.
Throughout 2016, Ob.Gyn. News will celebrate its 50th anniversary with exclusive articles looking at the evolution of the specialty, including the history of contraception, changes in gynecologic surgery, and the transformation of the well-woman visit. Look for these articles and more special features in the pages of Ob.Gyn. News and online at obgynnews.com.
On Twitter @legal_med
After 12 years as a private practice ob.gyn., Dr. Brigid McCue was beginning to feel overwhelmed. She loved her work, but keeping up with the kaleidoscope of care components and ever-changing clinical developments was daunting.
“I felt like it was hard to stay really good at all the different aspects of care,” Dr. McCue said. “I was doing fine with obstetrics, and I felt like I was managing my office well, but it’s hard to stay on top of the latest developments, especially in surgical areas. The other thing that was really hard to keep up with was the business aspect of medicine and running a private practice.”
So when an opportunity presented itself, Dr. McCue leaped at the chance to narrow her expertise to obstetrical hospital medicine. She helped establish the ob.gyn. hospitalist program at Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital-Plymouth in Massachusetts, and now serves as chief of ob.gyn. and midwifery for the hospital.
“I love the fact that I now have the time to get really good at [what] I really like, [such as] labor and delivery,” said Dr. McCue, who is president of the Society of OB/GYN Hospitalists. “Since I made this change, I feel like I’m so much more on top of things. I do simulations here on my unit over things like shoulder dystocia. When I was in private practice, I would go to one meeting a year and pray that I never had a shoulder dystocia [case]. Now I really understand the whole process and I take the time to run through that with my midwives and my other nurses and doctors.”
Dr. McCue is one of a growing number of ob.gyns. who have chosen to target their expertise to a single subspecialty or concentrated practice area. Data show subspecialization is on the rise in ob.gyn.
From 1985 to 2015, certificates issued by the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ABOG) for gynecologic oncology nearly tripled, and certificates issued for reproductive endocrinology and infertility more than doubled, according to data provided by the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS). Certificates issued for maternal-fetal medicine rose from 35 in 1985 to 100 in 2015.
Opportunities for ob.gyns. to subspecialize have steadily increased over the last 50 years. The subspecialties of maternal-fetal medicine, gynecologic oncology, and reproductive endocrinology and infertility were first approved for certification by ABOG in 1973. In 1983, ABMS approved a certificate of “added qualification” for ob.gyns. who complete fellowships in critical care. In 1995, ABOG and the American Board of Urology started the subspecialty of female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery, which was approved for certification by ABMS in 2011.
ABMS also approved a certificate of “added qualification” for ob.gyns. who complete a fellowship in hospice and palliative medicine in 2008. And fellowships now exist for minimally invasive gynecologic surgery and ob.gyn. hospital medicine.
The reasons that ob.gyns. choose to subspecialize are multifold, said Dr. Charles E. Miller, a reproductive endocrinologist and minimally invasive gynecologic surgeon in Naperville and Schaumburg, Ill., and one of the medical editors of the Ob.Gyn. News column, Master Class.
“Physicians subspecialize so that they can provide more medical and surgical expertise for a given population,” he said. “Secondly, physicians may be driven to subspecialize for lifestyle reasons. Generalists refer to subspecialists when technical expertise is desired to help with a clinical situation and potentially reduce medical legal risk.”
Ultimately, it’s patients who benefit from the increased care provided by subspecialists, noted Dr. Mark H. Einstein, a gynecologic oncologist and chair of obstetrics, gynecology, and women’s health at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Newark. Generalist ob.gyns. are tremendously knowledgeable and experienced, he said, but there’s no way for them to know every area, he said. It’s the difference between someone who might be doing a complicated surgery one or twice a year versus someone who is doing that surgery once or twice a week, he added.
“That is ultimately helpful for patients,” Dr. Einstein said. “It’s really about outcomes. This is all better for the patient. That’s the most important thing.”
Not every consequence of subspecialization is positive, however.
“As with everything, subspecialization has both positive and negative effects,” said Dr. Sandra Ann Carson, vice president for education at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. “The more time one has to focus on a small area, the better that area becomes. However, if all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail. The larger population may not need the care that someone with a rare disease may need.”
Dr. Miller refers to this challenge as “losing the forest.” He explains that subspecialists sometimes become so focused on their area of expertise, that they may overlook suitable treatment plans with which they are unfamiliar. An infertility specialist, for example, who neglects to consider a minimally invasive surgical procedure that could allow a patient to become pregnant naturally and instead recommends in vitro fertilization treatment.
“The infertility specialist does not have that particular skill and therefore directs that patient to IVF,” Dr. Miller said. “In the process of subspecializing, we have a tendency to lose the forest and look only at the trees.”
Finding a job is another challenge for the growing number of subspecialists. In many cases, fellowship-trained minimally invasive gynecologic surgeons may have to go back to practicing general gynecology because of a lack of positions, Dr. Miller said.
“We have to be careful that we do not “oversubspecialize” so that we are oversaturating the field,” he said.
In the future, the number of ob.gyn subspecialists will likely continue to grow and become more refined, said Dr. Dana M. Chase, a gynecologic oncologist at the University of Arizona Cancer Center in Phoenix.
“I think subspecialists will continue to become more and more developed,” Dr. Chase said. “Perhaps, some areas like family planning or minimally invasive surgery may grow further and become board certified.”
Dr. Carson foresees subspecialization becoming more focused on centralized teaching hospitals, with patients who need special care being sent to these hubs.
“Telemedicine and long-distance communication with a local obstetrician-gynecologist managing the whole patient will allow the best of both worlds,” she said.
Regardless of how subspecialist growth evolves, general ob.gyns. and other primary care physicians will always be needed, said Dr. Mary E. Norton, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist and clinical geneticist at the Fetal Treatment Center at the University of California, San Francisco.
“With increasing complexity, experts are needed to interpret advances,” Dr. Norton said. “However, patients also need a ‘medical home’ and primary provider who sees the big picture, and provides ongoing care beyond a single pregnancy or pregnancy complication.”
Why I chose to subspecialize
“I went to medical school with a particular interest in obstetrics. Once there, I was exposed to pediatrics and to high-risk OB, which I found to be fascinating. I particularly enjoyed my exposure to genetics during my pediatrics rotation and cared for a few children with genetic diseases that had a big impact and made a substantial impression on me. I ultimately decided to pursue an ob.gyn. residency and loved the OB part, particularly the prenatal genetics and high-risk OB. I found the balance of maternal and fetal medicine to be an exciting opportunity to care for two patients. I did an elective in prenatal diagnosis during my third year, including a bit of research, and was hooked.”
Dr. Mary E. Norton, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist and a clinical geneticist at the Fetal Treatment Center at the University of California, San Francisco.
“In my second year of residency, I became really interested in [gynecology-oncology] because I was fascinated by the surgery and interested in the chemotherapy practice, which is interesting because there’s always new research and new agents and interesting changes in how you treat the various cancers. It’s a very comprehensive, research-based field and that was fascinating to me. It’s a very busy subspecialty with very complex cases on multiple levels. You do these radical surgeries but then you have to be really involved in the choice for which chemotherapy agent to use, what type of radiation to give, and you also get really involved with the families ... Every case is so different and you treat women who are 16 years old, but you also treat women who are 96 years old. You see women from all walks of life with all sorts of different issues. The ability to really get involved with cancer research is a great part of the field.”
Dr. Dana M. Chase, a gynecologic oncologist at the University of Arizona Cancer Center, Phoenix.
“I took the opportunity to come to a new program where they were looking for an ob.gyn. hospitalist. That was exciting for me because I got to help establish the program... I feel like we’re a better department because I’m here monitoring labor, but I’m also writing protocols and making sure everyone is up to date. And I still get to do what I love the most, which is birth and babies.”
Dr. Brigid McCue, an ob.gyn. hospitalist and chief of ob.gyn. and midwifery, Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital-Plymouth, Massachusetts.
“I never considered delivering babies for the rest of my life. I was always focused on treating infertile couples. I completed my fellowship in reproductive endocrinology-infertility at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, at a time when in vitro fertilization was in its infancy and the laparoscope and hysteroscope were virtually diagnostic tools ... As IVF became more successful, I felt it was essential to add this expertise to my armamentarium ... It is truly gratifying to be part of a subspecialty that has advanced so far that the majority of our patients are able to achieve pregnancy via IVF.”
Dr. Charles E. Miller, a reproductive endocrinologist and minimally invasive gynecologic surgeon in Naperville and Schaumburg, Ill.
“During medical school, I was very interested in the surgical aspects of patient care. When I rotated in gyn-oncology – now knowing that I rotated with some of the best gyn-oncologists who ever practiced – I found myself drawn to the complexity of surgery, acuity of the patients, and the close relationships gyn-oncologists have with their patients. It hit me like a brick that this was the specialty for me. During my residency and fellowship, I was particularly drawn to the multiple modalities we use to treat cancers. I relished the idea that through clinical trials, gyn-oncologists keep pushing the bar to solve the cancer problem. What we do now is different than what we did 5 years ago. It keeps us professionally challenged all the time.”
Dr. Mark H. Einstein, a gynecologic oncologist and chair of obstetrics, gynecology and women’s health at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Newark.
Throughout 2016, Ob.Gyn. News will celebrate its 50th anniversary with exclusive articles looking at the evolution of the specialty, including the history of contraception, changes in gynecologic surgery, and the transformation of the well-woman visit. Look for these articles and more special features in the pages of Ob.Gyn. News and online at obgynnews.com.
On Twitter @legal_med
After 12 years as a private practice ob.gyn., Dr. Brigid McCue was beginning to feel overwhelmed. She loved her work, but keeping up with the kaleidoscope of care components and ever-changing clinical developments was daunting.
“I felt like it was hard to stay really good at all the different aspects of care,” Dr. McCue said. “I was doing fine with obstetrics, and I felt like I was managing my office well, but it’s hard to stay on top of the latest developments, especially in surgical areas. The other thing that was really hard to keep up with was the business aspect of medicine and running a private practice.”
So when an opportunity presented itself, Dr. McCue leaped at the chance to narrow her expertise to obstetrical hospital medicine. She helped establish the ob.gyn. hospitalist program at Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital-Plymouth in Massachusetts, and now serves as chief of ob.gyn. and midwifery for the hospital.
“I love the fact that I now have the time to get really good at [what] I really like, [such as] labor and delivery,” said Dr. McCue, who is president of the Society of OB/GYN Hospitalists. “Since I made this change, I feel like I’m so much more on top of things. I do simulations here on my unit over things like shoulder dystocia. When I was in private practice, I would go to one meeting a year and pray that I never had a shoulder dystocia [case]. Now I really understand the whole process and I take the time to run through that with my midwives and my other nurses and doctors.”
Dr. McCue is one of a growing number of ob.gyns. who have chosen to target their expertise to a single subspecialty or concentrated practice area. Data show subspecialization is on the rise in ob.gyn.
From 1985 to 2015, certificates issued by the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ABOG) for gynecologic oncology nearly tripled, and certificates issued for reproductive endocrinology and infertility more than doubled, according to data provided by the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS). Certificates issued for maternal-fetal medicine rose from 35 in 1985 to 100 in 2015.
Opportunities for ob.gyns. to subspecialize have steadily increased over the last 50 years. The subspecialties of maternal-fetal medicine, gynecologic oncology, and reproductive endocrinology and infertility were first approved for certification by ABOG in 1973. In 1983, ABMS approved a certificate of “added qualification” for ob.gyns. who complete fellowships in critical care. In 1995, ABOG and the American Board of Urology started the subspecialty of female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery, which was approved for certification by ABMS in 2011.
ABMS also approved a certificate of “added qualification” for ob.gyns. who complete a fellowship in hospice and palliative medicine in 2008. And fellowships now exist for minimally invasive gynecologic surgery and ob.gyn. hospital medicine.
The reasons that ob.gyns. choose to subspecialize are multifold, said Dr. Charles E. Miller, a reproductive endocrinologist and minimally invasive gynecologic surgeon in Naperville and Schaumburg, Ill., and one of the medical editors of the Ob.Gyn. News column, Master Class.
“Physicians subspecialize so that they can provide more medical and surgical expertise for a given population,” he said. “Secondly, physicians may be driven to subspecialize for lifestyle reasons. Generalists refer to subspecialists when technical expertise is desired to help with a clinical situation and potentially reduce medical legal risk.”
Ultimately, it’s patients who benefit from the increased care provided by subspecialists, noted Dr. Mark H. Einstein, a gynecologic oncologist and chair of obstetrics, gynecology, and women’s health at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Newark. Generalist ob.gyns. are tremendously knowledgeable and experienced, he said, but there’s no way for them to know every area, he said. It’s the difference between someone who might be doing a complicated surgery one or twice a year versus someone who is doing that surgery once or twice a week, he added.
“That is ultimately helpful for patients,” Dr. Einstein said. “It’s really about outcomes. This is all better for the patient. That’s the most important thing.”
Not every consequence of subspecialization is positive, however.
“As with everything, subspecialization has both positive and negative effects,” said Dr. Sandra Ann Carson, vice president for education at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. “The more time one has to focus on a small area, the better that area becomes. However, if all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail. The larger population may not need the care that someone with a rare disease may need.”
Dr. Miller refers to this challenge as “losing the forest.” He explains that subspecialists sometimes become so focused on their area of expertise, that they may overlook suitable treatment plans with which they are unfamiliar. An infertility specialist, for example, who neglects to consider a minimally invasive surgical procedure that could allow a patient to become pregnant naturally and instead recommends in vitro fertilization treatment.
“The infertility specialist does not have that particular skill and therefore directs that patient to IVF,” Dr. Miller said. “In the process of subspecializing, we have a tendency to lose the forest and look only at the trees.”
Finding a job is another challenge for the growing number of subspecialists. In many cases, fellowship-trained minimally invasive gynecologic surgeons may have to go back to practicing general gynecology because of a lack of positions, Dr. Miller said.
“We have to be careful that we do not “oversubspecialize” so that we are oversaturating the field,” he said.
In the future, the number of ob.gyn subspecialists will likely continue to grow and become more refined, said Dr. Dana M. Chase, a gynecologic oncologist at the University of Arizona Cancer Center in Phoenix.
“I think subspecialists will continue to become more and more developed,” Dr. Chase said. “Perhaps, some areas like family planning or minimally invasive surgery may grow further and become board certified.”
Dr. Carson foresees subspecialization becoming more focused on centralized teaching hospitals, with patients who need special care being sent to these hubs.
“Telemedicine and long-distance communication with a local obstetrician-gynecologist managing the whole patient will allow the best of both worlds,” she said.
Regardless of how subspecialist growth evolves, general ob.gyns. and other primary care physicians will always be needed, said Dr. Mary E. Norton, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist and clinical geneticist at the Fetal Treatment Center at the University of California, San Francisco.
“With increasing complexity, experts are needed to interpret advances,” Dr. Norton said. “However, patients also need a ‘medical home’ and primary provider who sees the big picture, and provides ongoing care beyond a single pregnancy or pregnancy complication.”
Why I chose to subspecialize
“I went to medical school with a particular interest in obstetrics. Once there, I was exposed to pediatrics and to high-risk OB, which I found to be fascinating. I particularly enjoyed my exposure to genetics during my pediatrics rotation and cared for a few children with genetic diseases that had a big impact and made a substantial impression on me. I ultimately decided to pursue an ob.gyn. residency and loved the OB part, particularly the prenatal genetics and high-risk OB. I found the balance of maternal and fetal medicine to be an exciting opportunity to care for two patients. I did an elective in prenatal diagnosis during my third year, including a bit of research, and was hooked.”
Dr. Mary E. Norton, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist and a clinical geneticist at the Fetal Treatment Center at the University of California, San Francisco.
“In my second year of residency, I became really interested in [gynecology-oncology] because I was fascinated by the surgery and interested in the chemotherapy practice, which is interesting because there’s always new research and new agents and interesting changes in how you treat the various cancers. It’s a very comprehensive, research-based field and that was fascinating to me. It’s a very busy subspecialty with very complex cases on multiple levels. You do these radical surgeries but then you have to be really involved in the choice for which chemotherapy agent to use, what type of radiation to give, and you also get really involved with the families ... Every case is so different and you treat women who are 16 years old, but you also treat women who are 96 years old. You see women from all walks of life with all sorts of different issues. The ability to really get involved with cancer research is a great part of the field.”
Dr. Dana M. Chase, a gynecologic oncologist at the University of Arizona Cancer Center, Phoenix.
“I took the opportunity to come to a new program where they were looking for an ob.gyn. hospitalist. That was exciting for me because I got to help establish the program... I feel like we’re a better department because I’m here monitoring labor, but I’m also writing protocols and making sure everyone is up to date. And I still get to do what I love the most, which is birth and babies.”
Dr. Brigid McCue, an ob.gyn. hospitalist and chief of ob.gyn. and midwifery, Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital-Plymouth, Massachusetts.
“I never considered delivering babies for the rest of my life. I was always focused on treating infertile couples. I completed my fellowship in reproductive endocrinology-infertility at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, at a time when in vitro fertilization was in its infancy and the laparoscope and hysteroscope were virtually diagnostic tools ... As IVF became more successful, I felt it was essential to add this expertise to my armamentarium ... It is truly gratifying to be part of a subspecialty that has advanced so far that the majority of our patients are able to achieve pregnancy via IVF.”
Dr. Charles E. Miller, a reproductive endocrinologist and minimally invasive gynecologic surgeon in Naperville and Schaumburg, Ill.
“During medical school, I was very interested in the surgical aspects of patient care. When I rotated in gyn-oncology – now knowing that I rotated with some of the best gyn-oncologists who ever practiced – I found myself drawn to the complexity of surgery, acuity of the patients, and the close relationships gyn-oncologists have with their patients. It hit me like a brick that this was the specialty for me. During my residency and fellowship, I was particularly drawn to the multiple modalities we use to treat cancers. I relished the idea that through clinical trials, gyn-oncologists keep pushing the bar to solve the cancer problem. What we do now is different than what we did 5 years ago. It keeps us professionally challenged all the time.”
Dr. Mark H. Einstein, a gynecologic oncologist and chair of obstetrics, gynecology and women’s health at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Newark.
Throughout 2016, Ob.Gyn. News will celebrate its 50th anniversary with exclusive articles looking at the evolution of the specialty, including the history of contraception, changes in gynecologic surgery, and the transformation of the well-woman visit. Look for these articles and more special features in the pages of Ob.Gyn. News and online at obgynnews.com.
On Twitter @legal_med