can i do phd after msc.anesthesia ? what are job oppuritunites after phd ?
Hello,
Hope you are doing well.
As per your query, you can surely do phd after completing your post graduation in Anesthesia course, as it will provide you better job opportunities.
Here is the list of Job profiles after your Phd:
Anaesthesiologist assistant:
Anesthesiologist Assistants (AAs) are highly skilled health professionals who work under the direction of licensed anesthesiologists to implement anaesthesia care plans. AAs work exclusively within the anaesthesia care team environment.
Certified registered nurse anaesthetists:
A certified nurse anaesthetic’s duties include maintenance of the equipment required in the OT, ICU, or ICCU. They are also assigned with the duty to clean, autoclave, sterilize, assemble, calibrate and test the instruments and troubleshoot, put requisition and maintain a record of the inspections done on a day-to-day basis.
Anaesthesia technician:
ATs operate different types of equipment- mechanical, electronic and pneumatic that are required for monitoring, evaluation and management of the patients who undergo anaesthesia.
Medical consultants:
Mostly large acute care and super-speciality hospitals having trauma, plastic surgery, transplant, and sometimes teaching facilities hire medical consultants. They also work in outpatient surgery clinics where they decide the limit of the dosages.
Surgeon : The anaesthetic surgeons specialise in the dosages to be given during all kinds of life-saving surgeries.
Cardiothoracic anaesthetists
: Cardiac anaesthetists work exclusively for major heart surgeries and they have expertise in the causes requiring a heart-lung machine
Pediatric anaesthetists:
Pediatric anaesthesia doctors work on pain management and anaesthetics in children during complicated surgeries.
Neuro anaesthetists:
These doctors work in the surgeries related to the central nervous system, that is, the brain, spinal cord and nerves.
Obstetric anaesthetists:
Obstetrics anaesthetists offer pain relief during labour and delivery in the labour wards
Acute or chronic pain management anaesthetists:
An anesthesiologist who specialises in pain management and helps patients suffering from chronic or acute pain due to burns, herpes, diabetes, tumour, or chest, abdominal, and pelvic pain, etc.
Regional anaesthetists: Regional or local anaesthetics inject anaesthesia near the nerves of an injury or affected area to numb it for operation. These injections are mostly nerve blocks or epidural or spinal in function.
Intensive care anaesthetists:
Anaesthetists working in the ICU or ICCU and assigned with the responsibility to diagnose and manage problems that occur almost in all body systems of a patient.
General anaesthetists: They administer or supervise the administration of anaesthetic drugs such as fentanyl and morphine to achieve whole-body anaesthesia of a patient undergoing major surgery. They are also equipped with an infusion pump so that they can administer additional medication whenever the need arises.
For further relevant information related to Anaesthesiology course, please visit the link provided below:
https://www.careers360.com/courses/anaesthesiology-course
Hope this helps you. All the best!