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#32919 - 05/22/09 05:38 PM
Re: would you do it again?
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Super Elite Member
Registered: 07/02/02
Posts: 1616
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Originally posted by snowflake: you can enter any specialty, including ones that I think I would be very interested in but wouldn't enter as a doc because of long training/working hours and very high liability (OBGYN and surgery, for instance). This is one of the strongest cases for PA or NP in my opinion. Were I still interested in obstetrics, you bet I'd be in CNM school right now instead of MD.
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#32921 - 05/29/09 10:39 AM
Re: would you do it again?
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Junior Member
Registered: 05/02/09
Posts: 7
Loc: California
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I'll just say: it's pretty ridiculous to blame all of health care's current problems on Obama.
I'm about to apply to med school for 2010, so I can't directly answer the OP's question (is it worth it? Don't know yet!). But I can tell you that I took time off after college, and it was great for me. Being a little older and having worked has made me a better, more mature applicant. I also have a friend who decided to go the NP route, and she LOVES it. She had similar concerns about finishing everything and realizing she hated it.
What I would suggest is trying to shadow some doctors in different fields. This will give you an idea of how much you like the work. Also: don't worry too much. You are young and have plenty of time to figure things out.
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#32922 - 05/29/09 06:55 PM
Re: would you do it again?
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Elite Member
Registered: 01/05/06
Posts: 259
Loc: Minneapolis
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They are not blaming Obama for all the current health problems. Rather, they are pointing out the issues with his over-ambitious plan for healthcare. Originally posted by ebo: I'll just say: it's pretty ridiculous to blame all of health care's current problems on Obama.
I'm about to apply to med school for 2010, so I can't directly answer the OP's question (is it worth it? Don't know yet!). But I can tell you that I took time off after college, and it was great for me. Being a little older and having worked has made me a better, more mature applicant. I also have a friend who decided to go the NP route, and she LOVES it. She had similar concerns about finishing everything and realizing she hated it.
What I would suggest is trying to shadow some doctors in different fields. This will give you an idea of how much you like the work. Also: don't worry too much. You are young and have plenty of time to figure things out.
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#32924 - 05/30/09 04:09 AM
Re: would you do it again?
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Super Elite Member
Registered: 04/24/03
Posts: 1546
Loc: Farm Country
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I will say that I went straight through college-med school-residency- practice, am married to someone who did the same, and I would do it again. I don't think I put my life on hold for this job- I have all the kids I wanted, have traveled and eaten out and just generally enjoyed myself. I figure I have to wowk anyway, may as well be at something I enjoy. Does the current climate of health care reform scare me? You bet. It hasn't run me off yet, though. I always tell people this: Doctors are smart people. Make it hard enough to be successful, or happy, or whatever, and we'll all do just fine in some other field.
_________________________
ResidentMom
"If you bungle raising your children, I don't think whatever else you do well matters very much." --Jackie O.
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#73227 - 02/23/10 08:51 PM
Re: would you do it again?
[Re: residentmom]
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Member
Registered: 05/01/09
Posts: 5
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4 years into practicing primary care medicine and still think it was the worse decision for me. i wish i knew better and had a physician mentor who advised me of the realities of actually practicing medicine vs studying/training to become one. i had a blast in medical school and residency. the real world of practicing medicine sucks. my husband is a specialist and he is happy so i can't figure out if male doctors are happier than female doctors or specialists are happier than primary care doctors.
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#73329 - 03/02/10 07:54 PM
Re: would you do it again?
[Re: jla]
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Elite Member
Registered: 01/06/10
Posts: 452
Loc: MA
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Wow-tough one. I went straight through and wish I had taken at least one year off. I also wish i had done a dual degree to have more options now. Primary care is 'ok' but I can't see myself doing it forever. It does burn you out. I don't know if I could have detached myself from the 'status' thing of the MD to be a PA but I agree it is an attractive option for many reasons.
JLA-sorry you are so miserable. Have you thought about changing what you do? I hear you about the debt-it's the ;gilded cage'-you come out highly trained, but only for one specific job. I am actually going to be paying my loans off this year with the help of loan repayment, and will probably look at getting another degree-maybe a Masters in Health policy-that really interests me....
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