I feel lost choosing a medical specialty — internal medicine, acute care, aesthetics, oncology?
Hi everyone,
I’m a junior doctor currently working in internal medicine, and I feel quite lost about which specialty path to choose.
I enjoy acute cases, emergency situations, differential diagnosis, and moments where you really have to think and make decisions under pressure. At the same time, I’m not sure that general internal medicine is the right final specialty for me.
Throughout medical school, I was mainly focused on plastic surgery. I did internships, research, and my thesis was related to breast reconstruction. For a long time, I thought plastic surgery was the goal. But realistically, it seems very difficult to get into, and I’m also realizing that I may not actually miss major surgery that much.
What I do love is aesthetics, smaller procedures, hands-on work, and outpatient-based medicine. I already have training in botulinum toxin, fillers, Sculptra, mesotherapy, lasers, and similar procedures. Aesthetic medicine is something I genuinely enjoy and could see myself doing long-term.
I’m also interested in oncology, palliative care, and complex patients. I like medicine that has depth, decision-making, a story behind the patient, and real meaning.
At the moment, I’m considering specialties such as:
Angiology — I like vascular medicine, ultrasound, varicose veins, thrombosis/embolism, and the possibility of smaller procedures.
Cardiology — I’m attracted to how complex, acute, dynamic, and intellectually demanding it is.
ENT — I like the idea of head and neck medicine, smaller procedures, outpatient work, and a possible overlap with aesthetics.
Dermatology/aesthetic medicine — it makes sense because of my interest in aesthetics, but I’m afraid I might miss acute medicine.
Oncology — because of the complexity, meaningful work, and long-term patient care.
I feel like I’m drawn to several different things at once: acute medicine, aesthetics, smaller procedures, oncology, outpatient work, and meaningful patient relationships. But I don’t want to end up in a specialty where I feel completely disconnected from myself.
Has anyone been in a similar situation?
Which specialty would you recommend for someone who enjoys acute cases, aesthetics, smaller procedures, oncology, and complex decision-making, but does not necessarily want to pursue major surgery at all costs?
Thank you so much.