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| Psychiatry For psychiatry residents and students interested in psychiatry. Co-hosted with The AAP. | RSS: |
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#51 | |
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gamma irradiated
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![]() Now THAT would've made my undergrad life MUCH easier!
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Leonard Samson M.D. Psychiatrist Super-Hero |
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#52 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2008
Posts: 196
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#53 | |
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Should Have Been A Cowboy
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People who major--or even have taken a significant amount of coursework--in psychology as undergraduates are the exception, not the rule. |
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#54 |
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Unstuck in Time
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A psychology major at most undergraduate institutions is a poor choice for pre-meds, because the programs simply lack sufficient intellectual rigor. That's not to say there are not rigorous psychology undergraduate programs in the country, but they are few and far between.
It's really a shame, since psychology is such a robust and sophisticated field. Why undergraduates who spend four years of their lives supposedly studying the field are exposed to so little of its nuances is beyond me. |
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#55 | |
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wt a lil hlp frm my frnds
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It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it. --Aristotle |
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#56 |
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Should Have Been A Cowboy
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I just took a lot of psych classes. Quite honestly mainstream bio degrees don't teach critical thinking skills. Those are hard to come by in undergrad, period. And even harder to come by in medical school. A doctor's idea of what passes for rigorous thought is laughable. Graduate seminars in more theory-based fields are really the only place to get that.
I will someday write the more sarcastic and highly critical companion to Groopman's 'how doctor's think'. I will call it 'why doctors are stupid'. |
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#57 | |
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wt a lil hlp frm my frnds
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#58 |
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Junior Member
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how do psych residency hours compare to those of other fields? do psych residents put in the 80+ hour weeks that other specialties are putting in? Also, can't imagine there'd be a great deal of night work in psych?
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#59 |
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Your Digital Ruler
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It is program-dependent. I can tell you that in NYC, you'll likely be up all night seeing patients in the ER, and dealing with issues on the floor. Most programs will not have you working 80 hours. But while on medicine, on call, and in more difficult psych residencies, you can and will work 80+ hours. These programs still exist and are often in large city academic centers.
__________________
I never lie. I willfully engage in a campaign of misinformation. --Fox Mulder Not all those who wander are lost. --J.R.R. Tolkien Visit the SDN bookstore. In association with amazon.com! |
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#60 |
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Junior Member
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Thanks for the informative post, good to here from someone with experience rather than just hearsay.
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#61 | |
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Junior Member
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#62 |
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gamma irradiated
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#63 |
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wt a lil hlp frm my frnds
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On the topic of hours, I don't really trust anybody.
When I was a student in surgery, I know the residents worked way, way more than the 80 hours a week. One day during a didactic the program director castigated the residents for all reporting their week as being 79 hours. Apparently that caught the wrong somebodies attention and the program received a warning. So the program director told them that he did not expect them to lie about hours, but that anyone caught reporting 79 hours every week would have to report to his office. No change would be made to scheduling, however. More interesting than that to me, was the reaction among those residents after the meeting. When I expressed my shock about the program directors comments and unyielding attitude, the residents stated that he was right to scold them about not being creative enough in reporting their work hours. They defended him by saying that more hours are a necessity to become a good surgeon through doing more procedures, and that they would rather lie about hours than see a less rigorous schedule. I thought maybe I was even seeing some stockholm syndrome type behavior. I don't know. So, I gave up any notion of becoming a surgeon. |
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#64 | |
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Senior Member
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There have got to be 2 sides to this story. I understand the need to protect patients from overly tired interns but I don't know how excited I am to start my career by having a primary goal be to keep everyone's hours under a certain limit, honestly, especially when I'm only getting 4 months of medicine whereas psych residents in the past for some mysterious reason (at least I think so) used to get a whole year of medicine. Whatever happened to seeing a patient through their entire illness? This applies to the psychiatry part of residency as well of course. I'm not asking for punishment or for a hazing type environment, I'm just saying that it gets discouraging to see people in psych constantly asking about call hours, lifestyle, etc., while surgery residents I know endorse the need to spend as much time as possible with patients in the OR; otherwise how will they learn to be good surgeons? Yeah they get tired and I've seen some complain but still. A lot of things I'm sure could benefit from change but it probably has to do with efficiency as well as pure number of hours. |
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#65 | |
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wt a lil hlp frm my frnds
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#66 | |
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gamma irradiated
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#67 | |
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Senior Member
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I am no fool. I know what Stockholm Syndrome is. I like being on call because I've found I learned the most then. I have no wish to be on call every night for the rest of my life but I don't want to not know stuff because I spent my residency trying to avoid things. It takes more effort to avoid things sometimes. And you only live once after all. (The fact that my namesake and her terrible songs have been all but dead for decades notwithstanding.) Last edited by nancysinatra; 03-18-2009 at 09:10 PM. |
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#68 | |
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Senior Member
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There are like 80 posts about the chill family friendly psych lifestyle and how it's going to be the next ROAD specialty in this forum per week lately it seems, mostly by med students, so my one little post in the other direction is hardly the laughingstock of the board. Also, I don't understand your "shock" at the surgery PD's comments and "unyielding attitude." Were/are you really that naive? Did you think that "yielding" would be a very common attribute in surgery PDs? ![]() EDIT AGAIN: You're not even a resident! You're a med student waiting to match! why does your name say "Resident" by it? You're no expert on this. Ha! And no, I won't come by and cover call. Last edited by nancysinatra; 03-18-2009 at 09:08 PM. |
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#69 |
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Banned
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Here's some questions.
Can people with controversial views become doctors? I have read some of the qualifications to being licensed to practice medicine is you have to have good moral character... etc, so does this preclude those with controversial beliefs from practicing medicine? If I became a psychiatrist and was also a Pentecostal/Charismatic who believed in spiritual gifts under 1 Cor. 12, would that be bad? (For you nonreligious this includes prophecies and tongues or echolalia, the presence of demonic entities in the spiritual realm, also including hearing voices and seeing visions, which I consider to be a free expression of religious faith with practical applications rather than a psychiatric disorder that needs to be treated). What kind of GPA should I shoot for to get into an average medical school if I intend on doing well on the MCAT? I've never seen the test but have no reason to believe it should be of unprecedented difficulty. |
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#70 |
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Banned
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Are psychiatrists/future-psychiatrists successful with women primarily before or after medical school?
Last edited by Frosted Pumpkin; 05-29-2009 at 01:52 AM. |
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#71 |
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New Member
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Does anyone have, or know where I can find, a list of competitive psych residencies? Google search brings up a list based on NIH funding, and there seems to be a lot of talk about the "Ivies" on here, but I'm more concerned with numbers of applicants, average scores, etc... Thanks in advance.
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#72 |
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Senior Curmudgeon
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A reader writes: "A few people have said that once you receive an interview invitation your numbers pretty much cease to matter and your interview (and to a lesser extent letters of recommendation) becomes the main criteria used to determine where you're ranked on a program's match list. Can you comment on the validity of this? Thanks!"
Ahh, interview season! The anxieties, the insecurities, the uncertainties, the dreaded "scuttlebutt", rumor, and innuendo! It's really hard to generalize, but based on the handful of programs I've had personal experience with (and essentially confirmed by others, like Swanny and psychattending, et al) there is some truth to the idea that your numbers get you the interview, and your interview gets you the ranking. Here's how we work it: I'm on staff at a "midtier" community hospital program (though personally I think we train folks pretty danged well!). We interview around 60 for 6-8 places. On interview day we hand in an eval sheet to our coordinator which rates the interviewees on several scales--academics, personal commitment to psychiatry, verbal and written communication (of which realistically the personal statement is our only guide), how enthusiastically their letter-writers sang their praises, and even how interested/connected they are to our location. Come February, the coordinator and chiefs will present us with a spreadsheet that preliminarily ranks everyone according to their cumulative scores across all these domains. We'll also announce who we've offered pre-matches to, given that we do see a good number of strong IMGs and DOs. We run through a ppt slide show with everyone's pictures, along with the narrative comments (pro and con) from the evals, and then get down to business. Basically we end up throwing out 10-15% as just not rankable. The remainder are divided into "pursue", "rank", and "I suppose it would be better to have them than take a random scrambler". The last few years we've filled before getting very far into the bottom half, anyway. We'll argue a bit about where to position some applicants within those top two categories, and it tends to come down to personality, interview style, and occasionally a particularly strong advocacy from a faculty member who knows the applicant. However, I wouldn't say that the final rank list differs tremendously from the preliminary one. Keep in mind that we want to get good people--folks that will do a good job taking care of our patients, who will show up on time for call, and who really WANT to be psychiatrists. We end up as surprised as you at how the Match falls out in the end sometimes.
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-------------------------- "Stand up for justice, stand up for truth; and God will be at your side forever." --Martin Luther King, Jr. "Life is pain, Highness. Anyone who says differently is selling something." --Dread Pirate Roberts. Last edited by OldPsychDoc; 11-02-2009 at 07:15 AM. |
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#73 |
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Junior Member
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Hi all
I am looking into Psychiatry residency. I passed step, 1 , 2 and CSA in 2006, but i was out of the country with horrible visa issues. I got back in the country after 2 years and i have my Greencard now. Since i had lost two years between 2006 and now, it was v,hard for me to get into residency for the past two matches. I just found out i passed step three with a score of 80/197. My other scores are 75 ad 76 on step one and step 2 respectively. My step two and CSA was first attempt. Step three i passed on the second attempt, and step one was my worst which i passed on the 4th attempt. I was wondering if there are any programs in Psychiatry that are flexible with the scores. I'd appreciate it if anyone can advise me on this... Kamal |
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#74 | |
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Junior Member
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#75 |
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New Member
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So stoked I found this thread. ^_^
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#76 |
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Banned
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I am in college and currently looking into some medical schools. My intended field to study is psychiatry. I admire the human brain and mind a lot. What medical school would you recommend for me?? Any advice is acceptable
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#77 |
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wt a lil hlp frm my frnds
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Generally speaking, the closest one or the cheapest one that is in the USA. Failing that, an international school with an excellent track record of turning out students that do well on the USMLE. There is no med school that has psych secret sauce that guarantees you'll be the next Gabbard or whatever. The true secret sauce is the sweat of your own brow.
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#78 |
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Banned
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How competitive would you say the psych field is?
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#79 |
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Unstuck in Time
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#80 | |
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Junior Member
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#81 |
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Junior Member
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Hey Guys,
Could use some clarity here, where does the "neuro" come into becoming a Neuropsychiatrist? I would like to end up as a Neuropsychiatrist but havent found specific answers on how to become that and where the neurology comes into the schooling and the entire path? Thanks in advance everyone! |
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#82 | |
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Rock God
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I'm not sure that a Psychology degree would prepare you that much better for psychiatry than any other degree, but perhaps slightly. At least take a couple psych classes if you have an interest. That being said, most non-bio degrees mean some of your required pre-med classes (organic chemistry, etc) won't count toward your undergrad degree (or will be electives). Anyways, we'll see what some of the actual psychiatrists say (I'm just a 4th year med student at this point), but your primary goal should be getting into med school. That means rocking grades, killing the MCAT, and whatever will allow you excel while fulfilling your interests. |
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#83 | |
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Junior Member
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#84 |
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Member
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hey guys,
is it legal for psychiatrist to prescribe herbal medicines without being board certified in integrative medicine? thank you! K |
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#85 |
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Still in California
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#86 |
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Senior Curmudgeon
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#87 |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2013
Posts: 40
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I'm currently considering pursuing an MD/PhD with a PhD in either neuroscience or neuropsychology. I was wondering if you would be able to give me a ballpark estimate of what I could expect as a tenured professor. I'm hoping to do an 80/20 research/patient balance.
Any input on whether the PhD will offer enough benefit to warrant the extra 4-5 years of lost salary? I wouldn't have any medical school debt but I'm still not sure it makes financial sense. I'm also seeing a lot of advice to head towards psychology if i'm interested in therapy, but I do think I would like to employ CBT and the like in work with my patients. Is this that uncommon with psychiatrists? I don't feel comfortable just prescribing meds unless I'm sure a patient has some sort of therapy on top of it. |
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#88 | |
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Senior Curmudgeon
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And yes, lots of psychiatrists combine various therapies, especially CBT, with their medication management. |
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#89 | |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2013
Posts: 40
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What do most psychiatrists do practice-wise? Their own private practice? Working at a psychiatric hospital? A regular hospital? Combination of some of the above? I'm trying to envision what a "day in the life of a psychiatrist" would be. I very much like the idea of building my own practice because of the flexibility it offers, but it also comes with a tradeoff of less security. Is it possible to work at a mental hospital or regular hospital and have your own outpatient practice on the side? Thanks for this thread by the way, has been immensely helpful. |
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#90 | |
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Senior Curmudgeon
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And yes, it's possible to dabble in more than one of the above, but most docs find that they are happiest when they're working on what they enjoy most and are best at. |
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#91 | |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2013
Posts: 40
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Some of the advice given just rubbed me the wrong way, like charging people to respond to emails and calls and only taking cash patients while charging exorbitant amounts. Is it possible to give complete, honestly patient-health driven care and still take home a good salary? Would subspecializing in child or forensics help? (Both of these fields are interesting to me) I realize this may make me sound like I'm trying to go into this for the money, which is far from the case. I just can't see myself going into the field if I can't expect to support myself and my husband comfortably while paying off both of our loans. |
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#92 |
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Senior Member
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i suggest you try to go do some observership/volunteer/shadowing of psychiatrists and or psychologists, and decide what u are drawn to... get out there, if you can, and do some reality testing. Its a long road..scour these threads, go to the websites, go to the local med school, talk with ur UG profs...really dig deep here..it's a big decision to pursue MD school..talk to some MD/PhD students too, and PhD solely...focus on what you really love to do, or think you'd love to do, and worry about the money in 10 years, not now.
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psychiatry resident |
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#93 | |
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Senior Curmudgeon
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#94 | |
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Member
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My graduate friend dual majored in psychology and English, and she states firmly that her English degree has been more helpful to her starting her psychology career than her psychology degree. I am an English major, so I am biased, but I have taken a few social science classes and think that her reasoning is based on how each field of study works. Undergraduate psychology approaches behavior scientifically -- it spreads out the world of ideas in human behavior and has you draw conclusions from that. A fantastic database for research. Studying literature works differently. We get a piece of writing like a bit of raw material and are asked to dig out the ideas ourselves and articulate them. That sharpens a thinking skill that you don't get in memorization majors. Personally, at least, I feel that I learned more about human behavior from lit than I ever did in a Psych or Anthropology class. Now, mileage varies between faculties, particularly in the humanities, but that's my impression. The psychiatrist I mentioned earlier had similar things to say; both of her children are studying Writing, one of whom has plans for medicine. I've heard of a certain program at Sinai (I think) that trains a handful of privileged undergrads in a humanities-exclusive program before medical school, and I recall the statistics stated that upwards of 50% of them ended up in psychiatry residencies. Something to think about, if nothing else. Humanities get a poor reputation because of their low immediate payoff at the BA level, but I would think those kinds of skills paired with a medical degree could go a long way in psychiatry, or any specialty that relies heavily on patient relations. Then again, I'm only a biased undergrad myself, so I may be entirely off. Last edited by Urnathok; 05-30-2013 at 03:29 PM. |
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