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Anyone have an article to read or something? |
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#2 |
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Van Wilder
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#3 |
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Member
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#4 |
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Dedication is the Key
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I prefer the chicken and shrimp.
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#5 |
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Senior Member
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#6 |
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Senior Member
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#7 |
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Member
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Thread went from srs concern to: trolol and worry about debt later
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#8 |
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Send in the clowns
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Let's play with some numbers (and a few admittedly gross oversimplifications):
Principal loan amount: $300,000 (let's say 400k including undergraduate debt) Loan after interest: $600,000 (the number that gets thrown around is usually 1.5x principal) Average gross salary of some random doctor: $225,000 Taxes withheld: $60,000 Med mal insurance: $0 (let's assume you start out in a hospital... I know, sloppy assumption for a few reasons) ...so you're taking home $165,000 to cover everything else in your life (car, mortgage, insurance, family, etc). It would not be unreasonable to allocate $50,000/yr towards student loan payments. Even in the worst case scenario (as listed above) it would take 12 years to pay off your debt while living off of $115,000. Not rich by any means but you still should be able to pay off your loans. |
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#9 | |
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Avatar of Boris
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I'd say $225,000 is a bit high for starting salary. Starting salary and the first decade of income is more important, as that's when you would be working with to pay off the loan. Using median physician salary is going to overestimate your loan repayment power. But, I agree that vast majority of physicians pay off their debt in a reasonable amount of time (20 years). Residency is the leanest part, after that, they should return to a semblance of living standard. As to the original question, most people with high debt are forced to high reimbursement specialty, if they can make it. If they don't, there are some loan repayment systems out there. Then there's rural medicine and family medicine programs for those going towards low reinbursement specialties in which it otherwise be impossible to pay off their debt. Lots of examples: http://services.aamc.org/fed_loan_pu...CCB7516C40321F National Health Service Corps is a big one: http://nhsc.hrsa.gov/
__________________
"If you ask me for an apple and I give you an orange you would say, that's not an orange. And I say, that's a banana. And that's not an apple either. Or a peach, that's not an apple, either. It doesn't mean that I'm equating the banana and the orange and the peach." - Dr Ben Carson, Brainsurgeon. |
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#10 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2011
Posts: 231
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Quote:
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M.D. Class of 2016! Sooooo happy!!!
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#11 | |
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Sicker than your average
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#12 |
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Dr. Cox Protege
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Frankly I wouldn't be counting on those programs surviving given the long-term cluster**** the US is currently in financially.
__________________
-NickNaylor http://medicalschoolisseriousbusiness.com/ ...for even the mind depends so greatly on the temperament and on the disposition of the organs of the body that, if it is possible to find some means to render men generally more wise and more adroit than they have been up until now, I believe that one should look for it in medicine. Rene Descartes, Discourse on Method |
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#13 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2011
Posts: 231
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#14 | ||
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2K Member
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Quote:
Quote:
Principal loan amount: $300,000 (let's say 400k including undergraduate debt) Loan after interest: $600,000 (the number that gets thrown around is usually 1.5x principal) Average gross salary of some random doctor: $225,000 ---> $150,000 Taxes withheld: $60,000 ---> 50% taxation rate ---> $75,000 annual takehome pay Med mal insurance: $0 (let's assume you start out in a hospital... I know, sloppy assumption for a few reasons) Monthly take-home= Roughly $6250. Loan Repayment: $3000 Rent and Utilities: $1500 "Disposable Income"=$1750 While $1750 may not be THAT much on a "doctor's lifestyle"....it does mean you have some room to breathe. I used big estimates (since most loan repayments on a 25 year plan are less than 3K and monthly take home pay will likely be higher than that for most doctors). It's still doable.
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#15 |
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Sunny California
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You borrow as little as possible, and then you don't think about it until you graduate.
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#16 |
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Senior Member
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Most doctors seem to be able to handle it. With reimbursement going lower, though, I have had discussions with several adcom doctors about this, and several of them admit to being frankly worried for the younger generations of doctors, especially if reimbursements continue to get lower.
I have also heard that a high debt load can keep doctors out of specialties like family practice where the attending salary isn't very good or that they push some people into IM or something else with a short residency so they can start getting an attending's paycheck more quickly. It's tough stuff and a lot to consider. I just know that if 90% of other students can do it and be okay, then I probably can too. |
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#17 |
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Senior Member
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300k for med school? Is this real life...
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#18 |
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8-16-13-39-42-45
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At Pritzker it is!
![]() (~$303k full COA)
__________________
Summer Research Data | Med School Info & Thread | Med School Data & Thread | SDN Mobile for iPhone/iPad or Android | Donate for perks! MCAT Flashcard Count: 650 |
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#19 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Milky Way
Posts: 450
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Well. Some of the COA are like Suggested Retail Price on you HDTV. COA may be 300K but avearge DEBT at Pritzker is only 150K. Well this is just an average; you have to analyze your own situation! Here is ranking by debt. http://grad-schools.usnews.rankingsa...ankings/page+3
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The Golden Rule: One who has the gold makes the rules.
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#20 | |
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Terrified Intern
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I hate to sound like a broken record, but you simply can't listen to really anyone currently out in practice about paying their student debt as so much has changed even within the 4 years I have been taking medical school loans. Major changes while I've been in school: 1) All Direct loans @ 6.8% or 7.9%. No more consolidation at 2%, No more private services giving perks to get your business. 2) IBR starting, deferments ending. PSLF program. All of these are new programs that have come up very recently, so I would not bank on them 100% being there in the future. You apply for the PSLF program not at the beginning of repayment, but as you near 120 payments. 3) Elimination of subsidized stafford loans. $8500 per year that is now churning interest at 6.8%. As you can see the student loan game is very fluid with rule changes almost yearly. You need to educate yourself and rely on the financial aid office at your school rather than other doctors. |
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#21 |
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Senior Member
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I currently have about $400 of disposable monthly income and, financially, life is pretty sweet. $1750 doesn't sound bad at all.
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UC San Diego School of Medicine - Class of 2016 |
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#22 |
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Senior Member
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Like, what does that even mean. You live within your means, real world expenses can be tailored to your budget. Personally, I would advocate always living below your means to allow for saving appropriately. Always having money saved for emergencies and retirement is a dying trend. It's not going to die with me though.
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#23 | |
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Member
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Quote:
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#24 |
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Dr. Cox Protege
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It's all relative. The ~$200/month I had in discretionary income has a single college guy isn't as much as it is now that I'm living with my girlfriend as a professional student. By the same token, I'm sure that same amount is peanuts when you're a working person that's married and possibly has kids.
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#25 | |
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Ether Man
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No retirement in there? 20k/yr minimum
How about life ins? ~2-3k/yr Own occupation disability? 3-6k/yr Your share of benefits? I pay 3-4k/ yr Saving for your kids college? 1000/mo ??? Maybe much more. Double your other expenses as well. Quote:
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Regards, Il Destriero “The truth is incontrovertible, malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end; there it is.” |
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#26 | |
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5K+ Member
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#27 |
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Senior Member
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Average debt is prob closer to the 250 range.. I consider my debt load of around 300, undergad and med school combined, to be on the high side for the typical student. It will be manageable for me.
I plan on entering a specialty that starts at 200k or better. No its not a competitive specialty, and btw anyone who can pass their classes can probably match into a specialty that starts at 200 or better.. its not as if thats some crazy lofty goal. 200 = 120 after taxes = take home 90 after loans. It's plenty. Most americans live on about a third of that. Of course the future reimbursement is uncertain, but keep in mind its mediated by the fact that as you gain experience your income increases.. and after 10-15 years the loans will be repayed, so the overall average take home should be about the same or increase from when you started, all depending on how big of a bite they take from reimbursement. You only sort of get into trouble in a couple select specialties imo: Family Medicine and Peds come to mind, where your limited mostly by volume.. salaries can be around 100k. From what i've gathered these specialties its possible to make 200 if you don't mind longer hours and are in the right practice setup and location, or if you do a fellowship and further sub-specialize. But an urban practice with regular hours is going to take a beating.. and paying off 300k with 100k is just asking for trouble. It's not impossible but its certainly not my cup of tea. |
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#28 | |
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5K+ Member
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I don't think many of the numbers in this thread are off the wall, but I suggest you plan conservatively -- assume the lowest specialty salary and highest cost of living and you should get a safe handle on how much debt you realistically can service. If you luck out and get a more lucrative specialty in a low cost of living location, then your lifestyle will be that much better. But you can't bank on that. |
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#29 | |
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5K+ Member
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Tuition goes up every year, so the $250k (undergrad and med school) that's reasonable to borrow today will be $300k by the time most in preallo get to that stage. I don't think you can "plan" to go into a specialty that starts at over $200k (depending on how far along you are in med school).You will change your mind about specialty multiple times, both by choice and based on what is realistic based on your numbers. I was surprised by what fields I liked and disliked. Some of it comes from the personalities you interact with along the way. Keep an open mind. |
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#30 |
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Terrified Intern
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Glad someone else posted this. I thought my head would explode with college students projecting their expenses for 8-10 years from now and not including those things.
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#31 | |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2012
Posts: 69
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Can't get into a reasonably priced school or get solid scholarships? Sorry, but this is where students should really reconsider entering the field. They are in most cases setting themselves up for anger by going to an expensive ass school, knowing what they do about reimbursements and the government's financial situation. This is just going to result in tons of spiteful doctors when they can't afford nice cars, but they will never stop and think "Hey perhaps I shouldn't have gone to Tufts for 60K TUITION a year." Summary: Be willing to live a very modest lifestyle if you can only get into expensive schools with no significant scholarships, or please don't enter the field because your spite will hurt both coworkers and patients. |
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#32 |
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2K Member
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Here are some easy ways to med school debt:
1. Stay away from big cities...while they may be more fun, the cost of living is significantly higher and salaries are way lower. This can save you a ton of money. Plus you will have plenty of instant friends in med school wherever you go. 2. Dont take all your student loan money, unless you have a family its highly doubtful imo you need the "whole" budget they give you, learn to live like a student. 3. Study hard to keep your doors open, this way you will have more options choosing a residency (see point 5) and a higher paying specialty. 4. Go to the cheapest school you get into, it rarely matters what school you went to, but rather what you did in med school. 5. Choose a residency that offers moonlighting opportunity, after your 1st or 2nd year you can moonlight at get near a 6 figure salary as resident if you are willing to work hard (obviously specialty dependent). 6. Avoid expensive undergrads...I walked away from undergrad with almost no debt and this was due to a cheap state school and having a job. 7. When you are an attending pay off your loans quickly before you adopt the "attending lifestyle" this will save you a ton of interest payments. 8. Be cheap during the whole process. i.e. dont buy the $100 blood pressure cuff offered by the rep to your med school, rather go on amazon and buy the $9 one which works just as well. If you do all the above you should be able to pay off a ton of loans in residency and by the time you are an attending you will be living in a low cost of living area with a salary mostly likely between 175-500K and should be able to pay off your loans quickly. Also there is no way you will have 300K of debt upon graduation if you can follow all of the above. I think the poor financial position of some physicians is not due to opportunity but due to their lack of care and planning of their finances. |
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#33 |
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Senior Member
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the usa average indebtedness after med school is like 160,000 for starters. Secondly, in my current job we have a lot of physician clients and since I see their financials I can tell you that they could easily pay off their loans. However, someone mentioned "living the physician lifestyle" above... well guess what, you should probably NOT do that until you pay off your loans. Hell, if you pretend you're living like a resident for 2 years, you've already saved enough to take a huge chunk out of your debt.
Caveat: the doctors that have the biggest money problems of our clients are the ones with stay at home partners that spend money as quickly as it comes in. Be smart and budget and you won't have a problem.
__________________
MD CLASS OF 2016!!! |
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#34 | |
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Terrified Intern
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#35 |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2012
Posts: 69
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Yes. People going to med school in big cities who spent $150 a night at bars on student loans are in for a rude awakening. People don't really realize they are spending money they don't have. $150 in student loans ends up being about $500 when you're done paying it.
Honestly med students are some of the most entitled acting people I've ever met. They literally expect to come out of residency and get a McMansion in a gated community with a Lambo after acquiring 300k in student loans. This is not reasonable. Expect to live in a small apartment like you did as a student if you were foolish enough to go to such expensive undergrads and med schools (unless you luck out and go into plastics or something) |
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#36 | |
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2K Member
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#37 |
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Dr. Cox Protege
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I'd be curious to know your definition of "average."
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#38 | |
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Dr. Cox Protege
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Dr. Cox Protege
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#40 | |
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Senior Member
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But you won't know what you like until you get there, that's true, |
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#41 | |
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Senior Member
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__________________
You'll Never Walk Alone Joshua 1:9
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#42 |
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Senior Member
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This country needs a flat tax.
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#43 |
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Ether Man
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Expectations to live like the last or possibly even the current generations of physicians might not be realistic for the pre meds starting college now.
20 years ago, tuition at elite private colleges and medical schools was 12-15k/yr, 40 years ago it was ~$4k/yr. Debt was not a real concern. Relative incomes were also higher. Now the public blames "rich and greedy" MDs as a significant part of the problem with healthcare in the US which continues to spiral out of control. A gov't takeover is certainly possible, not now, but maybe when you guys are a few years out of residency and ready to become a partner in your fancy PP job. There may not be a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. Y'all need to consider that when you're making your decisions. If you're taking out $100k for undergrad you're a fool, go to your state school. The same is true for taking full loans at the most expensive schools out there. Or maybe you're counting on a decade or 2 of high inflation to help with your debt burden? As an aside, I was proud to see that while my medical school is extremely expensive now, it's average debt is one of the lowest.
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#44 |
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5K+ Member
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If you are budgeting, you have to be conservative. So you have to assume you come out of med school and into a less lucrative field. But EM is gaining popularity, and anesthesia is like a roller coaster in competitiveness, which us why it got included in ROAD in the first place. It's not unreasonable to assume these will be out of reach of the average applicant in a few years, particularly as the enrollment of US med schools increase.
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#45 |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 677
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People need to stop looking at the "average debt" of a school. It means nothing for students taking out loans. The average debts at most schools aren't bad at all because of 1) students whose parents are paying for all of it and, 2) students who are on the military scholarship. You know what the debt load is for those people? $0. And that's why the "average debt" is something low like $120K. That's nothing. I can't even think of any state schools now at which the total cost would be $120K. For almost anyone taking out loans for the thing, you are going to pay well over $200K, especially when you consider interest.
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