During my dermatology rotation, I rotated through a variety of areas including pediatric dermatology, general adult clinics at downtown JHH and Bayview, inpatient dermatology, with splashes of cosmetic dermatology and dermatopathology. I felt like a kid in a candy store. Each experience was so rich and gave me another reason to love derm.
Pediatric dermatology was awesome because I love kids. I think they are some of the coolest people on earth. I saw a baby with a disfiguring hemangioma receive one treatment with propranolol and we noticed an improvement the very next day. I saw kids with port wine stains receive laser treatments to lighten and eventually eradicate for some, so they weren’t teased at school anymore or weren’t so embarrassed of what they looked like. Coming from the research, and particularly the basic science world, immediate gratification was not something I was used to, but man, I could really get used to that. The doctors that I worked with on Peds Derm were some of the smartest and most caring physicians I have had the pleasure to work with. Their passion for the science of dermatology and compassion for their patients showed me the kind of doctor I want to be.
During outpatient clinic at JHH, I got to see the residents shine. They saw about 80 patients a day (the attending saw each and every one of those 80 patients) and still had great rapport with the patients even though their interaction was time-limited. I was able to help their since as a medical student, you are not pressured to see X number of patients. I made some great connections with patients, so much so that several actually asked me to be their dermatologist. Needless to say, this was incredibly flattering, but I had to inform them that it would be a great many years till I could legally (if ever-come on derm residency) practice dermatology. I was also able to see various tests and biopsies the residents performed (punch, shave, KOH preps for fungal infections, ect.). I even got to participate in a couple of treatments, like liquid nitrogen freezing of precancerous actinic keratosis, electrocauttery or cutting of skin tags, suturing biopsies, ect.
Outpatient clinic at Bayview was very similar except the patient populations were slightly different. More bread and butter dermatology at Bayview, whereas JHH had some pretty rare disorders. Bayview was different in the fact that in addition to outpatient clinic, you are also inpatient consult. During my time we had some very interesting inpatient consults as well, diagnosing several drug-induced rashes, a couple of vasculitides, and a lady with cutaneous B-cell lymphoma.
Inpatient consults at JHH was what I wrapped up with and that was a really neat experience as well. You essentially are like Batman, sitting at home (in the resident room, finishing any outstanding dictations) until the batsignal (your beeper) goes off, and you speed off with your tool belt (your bag of biopsy supplies, ect), jump in the batmobile (walk across the busy hospital) and go to the rescue (diagnose at the bedside).
The Hopkins dermatology residents deserve their own paragraph. These are some of the smartest most motivated doctors I’ve met. They are incredibly hard working and dedicated, and still find time to help teach a lowly medical student. Their work load is incredible. I will backhand anyone who call dermatologists lazy. You heard it here first, backhand. They were amazing, inspiring people, and certainly the kind of people I would want as colleagues. The field of dermatology is in good hands.
Sorry for the length of this one, but since it is the field that I hope to be in the rest of my life, I thought detail was in order. Until the next rotation: Geriatrics (aka Chronic disease and disability)




