What you describe in your GP is not unusual. Any internist who's done a post-residency fellowship (pulmonary, arthritis and rheumatism, gastroenterology, etc) may not be able to attract enough patients in that sub-specialty to keep busy.
As a result, they end up caring for a lot of general medicine patients.
What you describe in your GP is not unusual. Any internist who's done a post-residency fellowship (pulmonary, arthritis and rheumatism, gastroenterology, etc) may not be able to attract enough patients in that sub-specialty to keep busy.
As a result, they end up caring for a lot of general medicine patients.
What you describe in your GP is not unusual. Any internist who's done a post-residency fellowship (pulmonary, arthritis and rheumatism, gastroenterology, etc) may not be able to attract enough patients in that sub-specialty to keep busy.
As a result, they end up caring for a lot of general medicine patients.