Master 30 Surgical Oncology Fellowship interview questions covering complex cases, research experience, and multidisciplinary care.
Question 23 of 30
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Rachelle Enns is an interview coach and job search expert. She works with candidates to perform their best in employment, medical, and post-secondary admission interviews.
Your interviewers want to understand how you feel healthcare can improve, specifically for cancer care and surgical oncology. Demonstrating a forward-thinking and innovative vision will set you apart from the other candidates competing for a spot in this Surgical Oncology fellowship program.

Rachelle Enns is an interview coach and job search expert. She works with candidates to perform their best in employment, medical, and post-secondary admission interviews.
"As cancer care as a whole is evolving with genetic testing and immunotherapies, and surgery evolves with less invasive techniques and advancing technology, I think this is such an exciting time to enter the field of Surgical Oncology. I'm most excited by how data and technology will help change cancer care, specifically how it relates to surgical oncology. As registry data gets larger among patients, being able to predict recurrences from remission will be such a drastic tool in the care of patients."

Ryan Brunner has over ten years of experience recruiting, interviewing, and hiring candidates in the healthcare, public service, and private manufacturing/distribution industries.
Put some thought into questions like this before your Surgical Oncology fellowship interviews so you are prepared to talk in an educated manner about how the delivery of healthcare can improve over time. Perhaps you feel that healthcare can best evolve through more patient-centric focuses. Maybe you think care coordination and synergy within the administration is the fastest way to improve care. Maintain a positive attitude and describe how you feel healthcare is evolving for the better in surgical cancer care.

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Jaymie
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I like to think that surgery in the next years will be always more based on evidence and that this evidence will come from the massive and systematic use of data from patients, for doing this, it'll be important to develop not only surgical sciences but to have statistical and basic science knowledge.

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Great!
Anonymous Answer
In my short 6 month experience rotating through multiple surgical oncology departments, I quickly learned how fast the field is advancing. With exciting results of new therapies (immunotherapy), screening research with database creation, technological developments, and advancement of less invasive techniques as well as non-surgical management options (total neoadjuvant therapy) it is an exciting time to enter this field. I look forward to the constantly evolving practice, requiring lifelong learning for ongoing skillset development while continuing to develop a patient-centered approach to cancer care.

Jaymie's Feedback
Healthcare is constantly evolving and advancing, so it's great to share with the interviewer your excitement and willingness to learn for many years to come. Great job giving specific topics of interest!
Prepare for rigorous fellowship interviews with answers from academic surgical oncologists.
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Written by Ryan Brunner
30 Questions & Answers • Surgical Oncology Fellowship

By Ryan

By Ryan