Pulmonary Medicine
What Pulmonary Medicine Fellows Actually Do Day-to-Day
Pulmonary medicine is not one job. It is three or four jobs running on a rotating schedule, and understanding that before fellowship applications open is the difference between choosing a career and stumbling into one.
On an ICU week—which in combined pulmonary-critical care medicine (pulm-CCM) programs occupies a substantial fraction of fellowship time—you are managing ventilators, titrating vasopressors, leading family meetings about goals of care, and making time-compressed decisions with incomplete information. The intellectual content is high-acuity physiology. The emotional content is relentless. There is no outpatient buffer.
On a bronchoscopy day, the work shifts to procedural. Flexible bronchoscopy, endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA), bronchoalveolar lavage, and increasingly navigational platforms move through the schedule in blocks. Yield matters, complications matter, and the downstream oncologic or diagnostic implications of what you find matter. This is not procedure for procedure's sake—it is procedure in service of a diagnostic question that often has a cancer at the end of it.
Outpatient clinic is where longitudinal medicine lives. A half-day clinic in pulmonary can contain a patient with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis whose disease has progressed since last visit, a patient with severe asthma whose biologics need adjustment, a post-COVID dyspnea workup that remains unexplained, a lung nodule that now requires a management decision, and a patient with pulmonary arterial hypertension whose right heart function you are tracking with serial echocardiography and functional assessments. These are not curbsides. These are complex, multi-year relationships with high-stakes endpoints.
Inpatient consult service sits between these poles: acute exacerbations of interstitial lung disease (ILD), hemoptysis evaluations, pleural effusion workups, unexplained respiratory failure in non-ICU patients. The consult fellow must synthesize pulmonary function data, imaging, and history quickly and make recommendations that the primary team will actually use.
The honest summary: if you want a single identifiable daily rhythm, pulmonary will frustrate you. If you find genuine interest across all of these contexts and can shift cognitive mode between them, the variety is a feature, not a bug.
The Pulmonary Personality: Traits That Predict Long-Term Satisfaction
Pulmonologists who report high career satisfaction tend to share a recognizable cognitive style. None of these are personality tests or requirements—they are observational patterns worth interrogating honestly against your own self-assessment.
- Systems physiology orientation. Pulmonary medicine is applied cardiopulmonary physiology. Ventilator management, pulmonary function test interpretation, and pulmonary hypertension assessment all require comfort building and revising mechanistic models in real time. Clinicians who find this energizing rather than tedious have a structural advantage.
- High tolerance for diagnostic ambiguity. ILD workup, unexplained dyspnea, and complex obstructive disease frequently do not resolve to a clean diagnosis quickly—or ever. The field has a high density of "we're managing a syndrome we've named but don't fully understand" situations. If you need closure to feel competent, this will wear on you.
- Comfort with prognostic conversations as a recurring clinical skill. Pulmonary hypertension, IPF, and advanced lung cancer all involve telling patients, sometimes repeatedly over years, that the trajectory is not favorable. This is not incidental to the job—it is central to it. Fellows who avoid these conversations don't shed that trait at graduation.
- Interest in chronic disease longitudinal management, not just acute intervention. The satisfying narrative in pulmonary is often "we stabilized, we monitored, we adjusted, we delayed progression." Not "we cured." Clinicians who find meaning primarily in acute resolution tend toward procedures or CCM as their primary identity and find the outpatient longitudinal work less engaging.
- Procedural interest calibrated to bronchoscopy, not surgery. Pulmonary procedures are invasive but not surgical. Bronchoscopy, thoracentesis, chest tubes, and pleural procedures require a specific kind of spatial and technical engagement. If you find yourself drawn to thoracic surgery rather than bronchoscopic intervention, that is diagnostic information.
One honest warning: pulmonary is emotionally heavy in a specific way that differs from other medicine subspecialties. The combination of ICU mortality, progressive fatal lung disease in outpatient clinic, and cancer diagnosis via your bronchoscope creates a sustained exposure to loss. Fellows who have not stress-tested this exposure in residency—who have not spent meaningful time on pulmonary service or in the ICU—often discover the emotional weight only after committing to the field. Rotate early enough to find out.
Pulmonary vs. Critical Care vs. Pulm-CCM: Choosing Your Track
This is a decision point that most applicants underweight, and getting it wrong has real consequences for lifestyle, scope, and career flexibility.
Combined Pulmonary-Critical Care Medicine (Pulm-CCM)
This is the dominant fellowship pathway in the United States. The combined program runs three years and confers eligibility for board certification in both pulmonary disease and critical care medicine. The training is broad, the ICU component is substantial, and the resulting scope of practice is wide. Most academic pulmonologists and many community pulmonologists in the US trained via this route. If you want maximum flexibility and have not ruled out significant ICU attending work, this is the default track to consider.
The trade-off is time and intensity. Three years of combined training means more ICU weeks, more overnight call, and a later arrival at independent practice compared to two-year pulmonary-only training.
Pulmonary Disease Only (Two Years)
ACGME-accredited pulmonary-only fellowships exist and are appropriate for candidates who want to focus on outpatient pulmonary medicine, interventional pulmonology, or ILD without committing to ongoing ICU attending work. These programs are less common than combined programs. The scope of independent practice is narrower—most pulmonary-only trained graduates do not staff medical ICUs, though they may manage ventilated patients in specific procedural contexts.
If your honest assessment is that you want to do outpatient ILD and bronchoscopy and have no desire to be a long-term ICU attending, the pulmonary-only track is worth investigating. The caveat is that the job market and hospital privileging structures are built around combined-trained graduates in many regions, so practice setting options may be narrower.
Critical Care Medicine Only (via Internal Medicine pathway)
CCM fellowships accessible through internal medicine residency (as opposed to anesthesia or surgery) are increasingly available as standalone training. The resulting practice is ICU-focused without significant outpatient pulmonary. This track is appropriate for the internist who identified the ICU as their primary professional identity during residency and has no strong pull toward outpatient lung disease management.
The lifestyle question here is stark: pure CCM attending work means sustained ICU exposure with limited longitudinal relationships. Some people find this preferable. Most do not, long-term, which is part of why the combined track became dominant.
The Practical Decision Framework
Ask yourself honestly: in five years, what does a typical Tuesday look like in your preferred career? If it involves outpatient clinic, bronchoscopy, and selective inpatient work, combined or pulmonary-only both fit. If it involves staffing a medical ICU regularly, combined is essential. If Tuesday is exclusively the ICU and you feel relief at that answer, CCM-only may be your track.
Procedural Profile: How Procedurally Intensive Is This Specialty?
Pulmonary medicine sits in the middle of the procedural spectrum among internal medicine subspecialties—more procedurally intensive than nephrology or rheumatology, less than interventional cardiology or gastroenterology. The nature and ceiling of procedures matter more than the raw count.
Core Procedures Fellows Are Expected to Master
- Flexible bronchoscopy. The foundational pulmonary procedure. Diagnostic indications include airway evaluation, BAL for infection or ILD workup, transbronchial biopsies, and foreign body assessment. Therapeutic indications include mucus plug clearance, hemostasis, and stent placement in some settings. Volume and deliberate practice during fellowship predict competence at graduation.
- Endobronchial ultrasound (EBUS-TBNA). The primary tool for mediastinal and hilar lymph node sampling, and a central procedure in lung cancer staging and diagnosis. EBUS has become a core competency expectation in most programs. The learning curve is real and program volume matters—a program doing low EBUS volume per fellow will produce graduates with incomplete skills.
- Navigational bronchoscopy. Electromagnetic navigation and robotic-assisted bronchoscopy platforms (including the Monarch and Ion systems) are increasingly present in academic centers and expanding to community settings. These are for peripheral lung lesion sampling and are not universally available in all fellowship programs. If interventional pulmonology or early lung cancer diagnosis is a career direction, program selection should include explicit assessment of navigational platform availability and fellow case volume.
- Thoracentesis. Diagnostic and therapeutic pleural fluid sampling. Expected of all graduates regardless of track. Ultrasound guidance is standard of care.
- Chest tube placement. Including pigtail catheters for pneumothorax and pleural effusion management. Part of core training.
- Medical thoracoscopy. Pleuroscopy for exudative effusion evaluation and pleurodesis. Available at some but not all programs. A differentiating skill.
- Bronchial thermoplasty. A procedure for severe refractory asthma. Limited to specific centers and specific patient populations. Not a high-volume procedure even where available, but relevant to fellows interested in advanced asthma management.
- Pulmonary function test interpretation. Not a manual procedure, but a core technical skill that distinguishes excellent from average pulmonologists. Spirometry, lung volumes, diffusing capacity, bronchodilator response, and cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) interpretation are all within scope and should be actively trained, not just observed.
What the Procedural Ceiling Looks Like
Interventional pulmonology (IP) is an emerging fourth-year fellowship that concentrates advanced bronchoscopic procedures, complex airway management, and pleural intervention into dedicated training. If you are drawn to procedures as a primary professional identity rather than as a tool in service of diagnosis and disease management, IP is worth serious consideration. It represents the highest procedural ceiling within the pulmonary world without crossing into thoracic surgery.
For the generalist pulm-CCM attending, bronchoscopy and thoracentesis are the regularly performed procedures. EBUS depends on institutional volume. The procedural work is real but not daily in the way gastroenterology or interventional cardiology is—the clinical and cognitive work is primary.
A Typical Week in Pulmonary Fellowship
What follows is a representative structural sketch. The specific ratios vary by program, year of training, and whether you are in a combined versus pulmonary-only track. Use it to build a mental model, not as a contract.
ICU Weeks (Typically Block Rotations)
In combined programs, fellows rotate through the medical ICU in block format—typically one to several weeks at a time, repeating across the three years with increasing responsibility. During ICU blocks, the workflow is fully inpatient: admissions, daily rounds, procedures (central lines, arterial lines, intubations, bronchoscopies in the ICU context), family meetings, and handoffs. Call frequency is higher during these blocks. Cognitive load is sustained and high. These blocks are where critical care skills are built but they are also where fellow burnout risk concentrates.
Outpatient Clinic Days
Dedicated outpatient clinic half-days or full days, typically with a faculty supervisor. Case mix includes the full range of outpatient pulmonary disease: COPD follow-up, ILD management, asthma, pulmonary hypertension, post-hospitalization follow-up, and new consultations. Fellows are expected to progressively take ownership of these patients, not just observe. Longitudinal patient relationships begin here.
Bronchoscopy Days
Blocked bronchoscopy procedure days in the endoscopy suite or procedure room. Fellows build case volume across flexible bronchoscopy and EBUS. In programs with navigational platforms, some of these days include robotics training. The pacing is procedure-to-procedure with the supervising attending, often with brief clinical discussions between cases.
Inpatient Consult Service
Pulmonary consult service rotations—non-ICU inpatient pulmonary evaluations requested by primary teams. This is where diagnostic breadth gets built: pleural disease, hemoptysis, suspected ILD, obstructive lung disease exacerbations, pre-transplant evaluations. Call requirements vary by program.
Fellow Education Time
Didactic conferences, journal clubs, case conferences, and research time are embedded in the curriculum, though the adequacy of protected research time varies substantially by program. For fellows with research career intentions, this is a point of due diligence during program evaluation.
Patient Population and Disease Complexity You'll Own
Pulmonary medicine has one of the broadest disease portfolios in internal medicine subspecialty practice. Understanding the weight each disease category carries in practice—not just in board exams—is part of honest specialty selection.
- COPD. The highest-volume outpatient diagnosis in most pulmonary practices. Management is complex, evidence-based pharmacotherapy has expanded significantly, and exacerbation management has direct mortality implications. Long-term relationships with COPD patients are often with people whose disease trajectory is progressive and whose functional decline you will watch across years.
- Asthma. Including severe refractory asthma, which has been transformed by biologic therapies targeting type 2 inflammatory pathways. Phenotyping patients for biologic selection is a genuine subspecialty skill.
- Interstitial lung diseases. A heterogeneous group of parenchymal lung disorders—IPF, hypersensitivity pneumonitis, connective tissue disease-associated ILD, sarcoidosis, and others—where diagnosis requires integration of HRCT patterns, surgical or bronchoscopic biopsy, and clinical context. The diagnostic workup is intellectually demanding. The prognostic conversations, particularly in IPF, are among the hardest in internal medicine.
- Lung cancer. Pulmonologists are the primary proceduralists for lung cancer diagnosis and staging, particularly via EBUS and bronchoscopy. You will be involved in initial diagnosis and often maintain longitudinal involvement in management alongside oncology. The cancer diagnosis conversation happens in your procedure suite and your clinic.
- Pulmonary arterial hypertension and other pulmonary vascular diseases. A subspecialty within a subspecialty. Management involves complex hemodynamic monitoring, escalating pharmacologic therapy, and coordination with advanced heart failure teams and transplant programs. Not all pulmonologists manage complex PAH—referral to PH centers is common—but the evaluation and recognition is within general scope.
- Pleural disease. Malignant and non-malignant pleural effusions, pneumothorax, and pleural infections. Procedurally and diagnostically rich.
- Sleep-disordered breathing. Many pulmonary programs include sleep medicine training, and some pulmonologists carry dual board certification in sleep medicine. The clinical scope includes obstructive sleep apnea, central apnea syndromes, and hypoventilation disorders. This is an area where the breadth-versus-depth tension in pulmonary practice is visible: some pulmonologists lean into sleep as a significant practice component; others refer comprehensively.
- Occupational and environmental lung disease. Pneumoconioses, hypersensitivity pneumonitis from occupational exposures, and inhalation injuries require occupational history expertise that is undertrained in most medicine residencies and rewarded in pulmonary fellowship.
The breadth is real. It also means that practice patterns diverge substantially between generalist pulmonologists and those who subspecialize (ILD centers, PH programs, interventional pulmonology, lung cancer programs). Your practice ten years out may look very different from a colleague who trained in the same program—because the field allows it.
Lifestyle Realities: Call, Burnout Risk, and Work-Life Calculus
Pulmonary-critical care medicine has one of the more demanding lifestyle profiles among internal medicine subspecialties, particularly for combined-trained fellows and attendings who maintain active ICU coverage. Being precise about where the burden concentrates is more useful than a summary rating.
Fellow Call Burden
During ICU blocks in combined programs, call frequency is high—comparable to a senior internal medicine resident on a high-acuity service. Night call, weekend call, and post-call fatigue are real features of the ICU weeks. During outpatient and consult rotations, call burden is typically lower. The experience is heterogeneous within a single fellowship year.
Attending Practice Variability
This is where specialty choice and practice setting interact most directly. An academic pulmonologist who maintains an active ICU coverage schedule with frequent overnight call has a fundamentally different lifestyle from a community pulmonologist who does outpatient clinic four days per week and bronchoscopy one day per week with limited overnight obligations. Both are pulmonologists. The combined training gives you the option set; the practice environment determines which option you take.
Pulmonologists who reduce or eliminate ICU attending coverage—either by practice design, by joining a hospitalist-CCM hybrid model, or by moving to a pulmonary-only practice—report substantially better lifestyle metrics than those who maintain full medical ICU attending responsibilities alongside a busy outpatient practice. This is a career-design decision, not a fixed consequence of the specialty.
Burnout Risk: Where It Clusters
Published data on physician burnout—including surveys from major professional societies—consistently identify critical care medicine as one of the highest-burnout specialties in medicine. The drivers are identifiable: moral distress from futile care, high-acuity death exposure, limited patient autonomy in decision-making, and a workforce that trends toward high conscientiousness. Pulmonologists who carry significant ongoing ICU responsibility inherit this risk profile. Pulmonologists who practice primarily outpatient have burnout risk patterns more similar to other longitudinal medicine subspecialties—still present, but different in character.
The honest implication: if you are choosing pulm-CCM primarily for the scope and flexibility it provides, and your actual practice intention is to minimize ICU attending work after fellowship, that is a rational and legitimate career strategy. Knowing this before fellowship rather than discovering it at year three of attending life is the goal.
Geographic Flexibility
Pulmonary-critical care is geographically portable in ways that some subspecialties are not. Rural and community hospitals need pulmonologists and intensivists. Academic centers compete for subspecialists with research tracks. The job market for combined-trained graduates has been consistently active; see current data pages for specifics. The corollary is that practice setting and geography interact with lifestyle in ways that are substantial and worth modeling explicitly before choosing a fellowship program location.
Fellowship Training Length, Structure, and What Programs Look For
ACGME Training Structure
Combined pulmonary-critical care medicine fellowship is three years of ACGME-accredited training following completion of an internal medicine residency. Pulmonary disease-only fellowship is two years. Both require prior board eligibility in internal medicine. The ACGME program requirements for pulmonary disease and critical care medicine are publicly available and specify minimum rotational experiences, procedural requirements, and scholarly activity expectations.
The three-year combined structure divides time across medical ICU rotations, pulmonary consultative service, outpatient pulmonary clinic, bronchoscopy, sleep medicine (in many programs), and research or scholarly project time. The exact distribution is program-specific within ACGME minimum requirements.
Application Timeline and Mechanism
Pulmonary fellowship applications are submitted through ERAS and fellowship matching occurs through the NRMP fellowship match. Application typically occurs during the second year of internal medicine residency for a start following residency completion. See the current season timeline on this site for applicable deadlines—these shift year to year.
What Programs Weight in Candidates
Pulmonary fellowship programs evaluate candidates along several dimensions. Being explicit about what is actually weighted—versus what is listed in program descriptions—is more useful than a generic list.
- Internal medicine ABIM board performance and Step scores. These remain screening tools at many programs, particularly competitive academic ones. They function as minimum thresholds more than differentiating features above those thresholds. If your scores fall outside the range programs have historically interviewed, this is addressable but requires a strategy—see the application section below.
- Clinical letters from pulmonologists who know your work. Generic letters from residency program directors carry less weight than specific letters from pulmonologists who supervised you on rotation and can speak to procedural aptitude, intellectual engagement with lung physiology, and professional demeanor in difficult patient interactions. This is the single most actionable application variable during residency.
- Research output or demonstrable scholarly activity. A publication, an abstract presentation, or a structured research project signals investment in the field beyond clinical rotations. At research-intensive programs, this differentiates candidates substantially. At community programs, it matters less but still favorably distinguishes.
- Demonstrated clinical exposure to pulmonary and critical care during residency. Fellows who have sought out pulmonary rotations, volunteered for ICU elective time, and asked for procedural mentorship during residency send a different signal than those whose only pulmonary experience is the required blocks. This is not gatekeeping—it is programs trying to predict commitment and readiness.
- Personal statement coherence. A personal statement that demonstrates specific intellectual engagement with pulmonary disease—a patient encounter that revealed a gap in your understanding of ILD, a physiology question that drew you into a literature search—is more persuasive than a narrative about "always being drawn to the lungs." Specificity is evidence of genuine engagement.
Research, Academia, and Non-Clinical Tracks in Pulmonary
Pulmonary medicine is one of the most research-active subspecialties in internal medicine, and the infrastructure for clinician-scientist development is more developed here than in many adjacent fields.
The Research Landscape
Major NIH institutes—primarily NHLBI—fund substantial basic science, translational, and clinical research in pulmonary disease. The ARDS Network trials, ongoing ILD registries, and lung cancer genomics programs have generated productive research ecosystems at academic pulmonary divisions. The American Thoracic Society (ATS) maintains active working groups and early career development programs. Funding lines in pulmonary research, while competitive in any federal funding environment, have historically been robust relative to some other subspecialty areas.
COPD biology, ILD pathogenesis (particularly IPF), pulmonary vascular biology, and lung cancer immunotherapy response mechanisms are all active and NIH-supported areas. Fellows with basic science or translational research interests entering programs with strong research infrastructure have a realistic pathway to protected time, R01-track mentorship, and career development award (K23, K08) support.
The Clinician-Scientist Pathway
For fellows with research career intentions, the critical variables are program selection (research-intensive programs with established investigator mentors and track records of fellow publications and grant support), protected research time during fellowship (genuinely protected, not "protected unless we need you clinically"), and identification of a specific mentor with active funding before or early in fellowship. Fellowship research time without a funded mentor with bandwidth is a poor investment of years.
The T32 training grant landscape in pulmonary is reasonably active. Programs with NHLBI T32 support typically provide structured research training, salary support, and national conference access that accelerates career development in ways that programs without T32 support structurally cannot match. This is a concrete point of due diligence for research-oriented applicants.
Non-Clinical and Non-Academic Tracks
Pulmonologists move into medical education leadership, health policy (respiratory disease carries substantial public health weight given the burden of COPD, occupational lung disease, and air quality), industry roles in pharmaceutical and device development (biologics for asthma/ILD and bronchoscopic platforms are active commercial areas), and quality improvement leadership. These are not the dominant tracks but they are legitimate and well-populated enough that they are worth naming as options for fellows whose primary interest is not bedside practice or traditional research.
Compensation, Job Market, and Geographic Demand
Compensation and job market data shift year to year and vary substantially by practice setting, geography, and subspecialization within pulmonary. This section presents structural patterns rather than specific figures; see the current data pages on this site for current ranges.
Structural Compensation Patterns
Pulmonary-critical care is among the higher-compensated internal medicine subspecialties, primarily because of the procedural component and the ICU coverage value that hospitals and health systems assign to combined-trained physicians. The premium is real but varies by how much ICU work is included in the position.
Practice setting creates significant spread:
- Academic employed positions typically offer lower base compensation than private practice or employed community positions, with trade-offs in research time, academic protected time, and the professional identity value of being part of a subspecialty program.
- Private practice and employed community positions, particularly those with significant ICU coverage responsibilities, tend toward higher total compensation, often with productivity-based components tied to RVU generation from procedures and clinical volume.
- Subspecialization within pulmonary—particularly interventional pulmonology and pulmonary hypertension programs—can affect both compensation and practice setting options. Interventional pulmonologists at high-volume centers performing complex bronchoscopic procedures have a different compensation profile than general outpatient pulmonologists.
Job Market and Geographic Demand
Demand for pulmonary-critical care physicians has been consistently active. The combination of an aging population, high burden of COPD and lung cancer, and persistent ICU staffing needs creates structural demand that has not softened significantly in recent years. Rural and underserved regions have documented shortages, and health systems in these settings often offer competitive recruitment packages to attract combined-trained graduates.
Urban academic markets are more competitive—position availability at prestigious programs is limited and often filled by graduates of those programs or their peer institutions. Community and regional markets offer more positions with more flexibility. Geographic flexibility is a genuine career asset in this specialty.
Warning Signs That Pulmonary May Not Be Your Best Fit
This section names patterns honestly. The purpose is not to discourage—it is to prevent a three-year fellowship investment in the wrong direction when a different subspecialty would be a better match.
- You avoid prognostic conversations during residency. If you consistently find reasons to defer the goals-of-care discussion to a palliative care team, the case manager, or the attending—not because you lack authority, but because you are genuinely uncomfortable—this matters. Pulmonary practice at every level requires these conversations as a primary skill, not a subspecialty referral.
- Diagnostic ambiguity produces anxiety rather than intellectual engagement. ILD workup is genuinely uncertain. Unexplained dyspnea can remain unexplained. If the absence of a diagnosis triggers distress rather than a systematic next-step framework, the volume of ambiguous cases in pulmonary outpatient practice will be a sustained stressor.
- You found the ICU emotionally depleting without compensation in other parts of the job. This is not weakness—it is information. Some people find the ICU meaningful and grounding even at high intensity. Others find it depleting in ways that are not offset by the rest of the clinical work. Honest assessment of your own ICU experience in residency is the most useful data you have.
- You are primarily drawn to acute episodic intervention rather than longitudinal disease management. If the most satisfying patient encounters in residency were the ones where you intervened acutely and the patient walked out recovered, and the least satisfying were the ones where you adjusted a stable chronic disease regimen at the seventeenth visit, outpatient-heavy pulmonary practice will feel unrewarding. This is not a moral failing—it is a practice style mismatch.
- Your procedural interests run toward surgery rather than bronchoscopy. Pulmonary procedures are endoscopic and pleural. If your procedural instinct runs toward operative fields, thoracic surgery is a genuine alternative worth examining—not as a consolation, but as a better match.
- You have not spent meaningful time on pulmonary service or in the ICU during residency. This is not a fit warning sign on its own—it is a knowledge gap. You cannot self-select honestly without clinical exposure. If you have not rotated on pulmonary service beyond the required block, the fit question is genuinely unanswered, and that should prompt action before applications open, not after.
How to Build a Competitive Pulmonary Fellowship Application During Residency
The following is sequenced by timing. Earlier actions have compounding effects. Later actions have diminishing leverage.
First Half of Residency
- Rotate on pulmonary early and do it intentionally. An early elective on the pulmonary or pulm-CCM service is both a fit-testing experience and the beginning of your letter-writing relationship. Show up prepared. Read about the cases before rounds. Ask about physiology, not just management. Attendings who mentor fellows notice this in subinterns and residents.
- Spend meaningful time in the medical ICU beyond required rotations. Volunteer for additional ICU elective time if available. This builds clinical skills directly relevant to combined fellowship and signals to programs that you have self-selected into the hardest parts of the training before being required to.
- Identify a pulmonologist willing to serve as a research mentor. You do not need to have a project yet. You need a faculty relationship that could become a project. Ask directly: "I'm interested in pulmonary fellowship and looking for research mentorship. Do you have ongoing work where a resident could contribute?" Most pulmonologists with active programs will engage with this question if asked specifically.
Middle of Residency
- Generate a concrete scholarly product. A case report in a relevant journal, a quality improvement project with data, an abstract submitted to ATS—any of these represent completion, not just initiation. The common failure mode is starting a project without getting it across the finish line. Fellowship programs can tell the difference between a completed manuscript and a project "in progress" that may never resolve.
- Build procedural volume and document it. Thoracentesis, bronchoscopy assistance, chest tube placement. Maintain a log. Ask pulmonary attendings to supervise you on procedures specifically so they can speak to procedural aptitude in letters rather than just clinical judgment.
- Attend a major pulmonary conference if feasible. ATS annual conference exposes you to the field's intellectual landscape, lets you meet fellows and attendings outside your program, and signals commitment in a way that is legible to programs you will later apply to.
Application Year
- Secure specific letters from pulmonologists who supervised your clinical work. Three letters, at least two from pulmonologists or critical care physicians who have watched you work. Generic letters from your program director without pulmonary-specific content are weak. A letter from a pulmonologist who can describe how you handled a diagnostic challenge on an ILD case or your approach to a difficult bronchoscopy learning curve is strong.
- Write a personal statement that demonstrates specific intellectual engagement with a pulmonary problem. One or two concrete clinical or intellectual experiences that pulled you toward the field, connected to what you intend to pursue in fellowship. Avoid the generic arc. Be specific about what aspect of pulmonary disease engaged you intellectually and what you want to build during training.
- If your board scores or exam history fall below the range programs typically interview: this is not a disqualifying factor, but it requires a strategy. Research output, strong letters, and program-specific outreach (including reaching out to program directors directly and attending the programs' open houses or recruitment events where available) can shift the probability. Address the score directly in your personal statement or in interviews—programs that can be persuaded to look past a score need to be given the reasoning to do so. See the application section of this site for detailed guidance on applications with nonstandard profiles.
Validate the Fit Before You Commit
Every piece of this page is a framework. The only data that actually answers the fit question for you is time on a pulmonary service—watching what the fellows and attendings actually do, noticing what engages you and what doesn't, and having direct conversations with pulmonologists about what their careers look like week to week.
Specific actions to take this month if you are seriously considering pulmonary:
- Schedule an informational interview with a pulmonologist at your institution. Not a mentorship request, not a letter request—just thirty minutes to ask what a typical week looks like and what they wish they had known before fellowship. Do this with two or three people to get range.
- Use the PGY Zero specialty comparison tool to map pulmonary against adjacent fields—critical care-only, thoracic surgery, and the higher-volume procedural subspecialties—across the dimensions that matter most to you.
- Review the PGY Zero rotation guide for pulmonary medicine to make the most of your next clinical exposure on service.
- If you have a nonstandard application profile—exam attempts, gaps, IMG status, or late interest in the specialty—read the application strategy section before you assume you know where you stand. Program fit and application approach matter more than most applicants with nonstandard profiles estimate, and the work of building a competitive application from a starting point other than the median is tractable with the right strategy.
Pulmonary medicine is a legitimate and demanding career for the right physician. It is not a default or a fallback. The clinicians who are most satisfied in it chose it knowing what the ICU costs, what ILD prognostic conversations require, and what a Tuesday in outpatient clinic actually looks like. That is the bar for choosing it. This page exists to help you clear it with open eyes.