Full Podcast: Dr. Marcus Hwang @dr_marcushwang - Dose of Dental Podcast #162 x Dr. Gallagher's Podcast
Description
Top 5 Topics:
- The Dark Side of Surgical Training: Gatekeeping, Arrogance, and Burnout
- Why Orthognathic Surgery Is an “Expensive Hobby”
- DSOs and the Death of Private Practice: Is Dentistry Becoming Too Corporate?
- From Pager Trauma to Parenthood: Balancing Surgery and Real Life
- How Social Media Is Changing Surgical Education, Forever!
Quotes & Wisdom:
"Experience is something you get just after you need it." - A perfect summary of surgical training: sometimes you only truly learn after the moment you needed the knowledge!
"Residency doesn’t have to be a Greek tragedy." — Brian Alpert - A reminder that you don’t have to martyr yourself—there is (sometimes) a space to enjoy the process despite the hardship.
"Your job isn’t to prevent mistakes, it’s to watch learners make them and counsel them afterwards." - A powerful mindset shift about mentorship and parenting—accepting that people must learn by doing.
"The more specialized you become, the more vulnerable you are to becoming someone else’s employee." - A reflection on professional autonomy and the trade-offs of deep specialization.
"If a system relies purely on generosity, it will eventually fail." - A candid observation about why reimbursement and incentives are critical to sustain care.
"Confidence isn’t self-affirmation—it’s the irrefutable evidence you’ve accumulated over time." — Alex Hormozi - A beautiful distinction between shallow bravado and true earned self-assurance.
"Life shouldn’t have to stop because you’re doing something you enjoy.” - On the importance of preserving joy and creativity even in demanding professions.
"If you can start a project or hobby during your chief year, you’ll be able to start anything whenever you want for the rest of your life." - A call to action not to let circumstances delay your passions.
"When your pager goes off, it’s like fun time is over. But it shouldn’t have to be that way." - On the unseen costs of professional life bleeding into personal moments.
"I think humility is important. Arrogance has burned me every single time."
Questions:
(04:10 ) - How do you best treat your chief year while satisfying your own self-interest, looking good to attendings, and also taking care of your underclassmen?
(11:22 ) - How I can get back into podcasting, focusing on surgical education and concepts?
(19:16 ) - What are your thoughts on the @omaxface posts and the board-style question content approach?
(37:22 ) - What are you looking to do after graduation—hospital setting, academia, or private practice?
(43:50 ) - Could you imagine trying to find a partner now, at this point in your career? How different would that be?
(45:31 ) - Tell me about your program’s structure—trauma weeks, call schedule, and how you split duties with ENT and plastics.
(49:40 ) - Do you remember any recent times when you were a little too confident or arrogant in surgery and it burned you?
(53:22 ) - How do you teach colleagues about rare cases or critical pearls if they literally weren’t there for the experience?
(56:47 ) - Have you noticed the Pavlovian response when your pager goes off—how everyone around you immediately goes quiet?
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