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| Allopathic MD student topics. For current medical students. | RSS: |
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#1 |
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Member
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http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/761870 |
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#2 |
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Senior Member
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I hate these stats because they mean nothing for the people that read them. If 1 person saw this and decided they would switch careers midway through med school because they think they should have chosen something else I will be surprised.
If advising premeds using this stat, what viable options would you give them that is as rewarding, stable, and lucrative? Banking (the usual go-to) is certainly not stable, and despite what the Wall Street movie might have you think, most are not raking in cash. Entrepreneurship is as vague as any answer you could give. Dentistry is the only option that comes to mind and last I read they were pretty happy. |
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#3 |
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MS-3
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I feel like they report that every week.
I may one day regret the whole ordeal (only 2 years into medical school and I have had many days where I wonder why the hell I didn't just get an engineering job like my friends), but I know for a fact that if I hadn't decided to go to medical school I would 100% regret it and always wonder "what if..."
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UF College of Medicine Class of 2014 |
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#4 |
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Señor Member
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I think there was a different expectation of what medicine would be like for a lot of older physicians -- respect, autonomy, high pay, etc.
Now we know that we'll be government slaves making $40k under Reichsfuhrer Obama. Our expectations are low, ergo we will be happier. (Partially kidding). |
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#5 |
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2K Member
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I wonder what percent of people in law or other professions regret going into their field. Probably those who are unemployed would have an even greater level of regret.
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#6 |
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Senior Member
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Exactly!!! I bet the percentage of physicians who this applies to is way higher than 54%. Therefore, many of them would still have entered medicine.
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#7 |
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1K Member
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If I could do everything over again, I would definitely have moved to the beach of my own private island surrounded by beautiful half-naked women.
Oh well...hindsight is 20/20 right?
__________________
Internal Medicine [X] Family [X] Surgery [X] OBGYN [X] Psych [X] PEDS [almost done] |
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#8 |
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Senior Member
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You still can. Do-overs don't usually involve winning the lottery though, you'd have to earn that one, haha.
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#9 |
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1K Member
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These results are probably heavily influenced by the uncertainty behind the PPACA/healthcare reform. Will be interesting to see if the figures change much when the political dust settles.
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#10 | ||
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Senior Member
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Quote:
I'm sure if you polled American workers, lots of jobs would have only 20% who would chose their job again. Good job docs. Quote:
I don't think you can make anything of these #'s unless you were to poll other careers and see their #'s. Naive people think other careers have 85-100% career satisfaction. |
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#11 | |
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I KNOW NOTHING
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#12 | |
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Senior Member
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I totally agree with your second statement. 50% seems fairly decent to me. |
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#13 | |
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Senior Member
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The grass is not greener. |
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#14 |
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Ripe Prince of Westwood
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Physicians assume they can succeed in ANY field and rightfully so. Yet, if you pollother professionals i wonder how many would say they would choose other careers if they could have been ANYTHING else
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CLASS OF 2015
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#15 |
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Ripe Prince of Westwood
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Also i wonder if medicine by virtue of training rquirements selects for people who are more likely to be unhappy rgardless of their ultimate career selection
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#16 | |
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Senior Member
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Do you realize how many people change careers? |
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#17 | |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2012
Posts: 69
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Ultimately, many docs are absolutely clueless about how difficult, frustrating, or absolutely mind-numbing other career paths are. I am damn glad I won't be spending thousands of days of my life sitting in a a cubicle punching in excel spreadhseets. |
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#18 | |
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Senior Member
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#19 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 553
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Frankly, doctors have inflated egos and often assume they will be the best at any field they go into. When you ask physicians what they would rather be doing, you don't get answers like lawyer or consultant, you get answers like Supreme Court justice and CEO.
If you have an unrealistic view of your other options, of course you might regret a certain career path. |
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#20 |
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OMS-2
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You won't find many jobs in the world where over half of those working it would choose it again. Besides, didn't we all spend four years getting comparative studied beat into our brains? Sure, it's 54%, but compared to what? We have no way to gauge what 54% even means.
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LMU-DCOM Class of 2016 | OMS-2 Follow my blog Four Years for Medicine at http://lmudcomdru.wordpress.com/ |
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#21 | |
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Chronically painful
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I think there is truth in this. Many of the "qualities" that get one into and through med school don't translate well into the practice of modern, American medicine. Doing work that you are trained to do but emotionally ill suited for will cause unhappiness.
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#22 | |
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1K Member
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The people predisposed to happiness got off the train a few stops back. They finished high school, tech school, undergrad, or a master's and thought: "This is alright. I'm done busting my ass, I can be happy here." It's the people who aren't happy that are going to push on to medical school, residency, fellowship, etc in a constant search for something better. As you ride the train further and further, the balance in the population shifts away from people pursuing a goal that will actually make them happy and toward people hoping to the next thing will finally be good enough... |
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#23 | |
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Señor Member
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It takes a certain kind of neuroticism to choose to be a student from the age of 5 until 35. |
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#24 | |
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Chronically painful
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You're point about getting off the train is well taken. Medical students must be driven enough to keep pushing and pushing and delaying gratification. I think that most of us worked with the ideal that once our educations were complete we would be guarenteed some things like the ability and autonomy to practice medicine and make a better than average living. The reality is that the medicine one practices is at best half of the work load the rest being given over to documentation, billing, regulatory compliance, social work, etc. That is draining and usually futile. |
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#25 |
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1K Member
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Eh, being a resident is more like having an entry level job than being a student. You get low salaries for 5 years while being trained on the job, then take a massive leap after 5-7 years. It's really only an extra 4 years of true "schooling"
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#26 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 273
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nm
Last edited by Rothbard; 10-01-2012 at 05:00 PM. |
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#27 | |
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Senior Member
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#28 | |
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Sunny California
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I think there's some truth in most of what people have said before:
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#29 | |
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Senior Member
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I think it really hard to see that side of medicine because youre so insulated from it as a pre med or even 1st and 2nd year. I mean if some pre med student asked to shadow me Im not gonna be like "ok here is all the paper work I have to do lets go through all my notes blah blah blah" Im gonna try to make it interesting for the couple hours they are there. Even as a third year I get insulated from it, residents tell me they got nonsense to do and tell me I can go eat or study or whatever. tl;dr: you dont see how much (little?) medicine happens cuz youre not exposed to all the paperwork, etc. So when you do get out there its not exactly what you thought it would be. |
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#30 | |
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Senior Member
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1. Idealistic "I want to help people" type 2. Money-hungry I have never met a person who said, "I want to see patients for chronic conditions that they fail to take my advice for and spend hours on the phone with insurance companies trying to get reimbursed for my services." |
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#31 |
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Senior Member
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If medicine is so bad
Why do 40-50% of applicants have a doctor in the family??? Ud think they would say no I've NEVER met a doctor who said avoid medschool |
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#32 |
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1K Member
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You probably don't know that many doctors then. While I agree that most doctors are happy, there are plenty of disgruntled ones out there
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#33 |
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1K Member
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#34 |
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 743
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This. Once you start residency, you're really not a student anymore. It is like an entry level job--which many smart people work for a number of years, fighting for small promotions only to get laid off after 10 or 15 years and have to start over. And they spend plenty of time doing BS paperwork.....
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#35 | |
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MIT strong
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Overall, when on the clinical service, I would estimate that I spend 80-90% of my time doing what I consider to be useful things. As always when we have had this type of conversation, YMMV and I am only referring to my personal experience as a salaried academic pediatric specialist at a large, extremely well-run children's hospital. |
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#36 | ||
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Senior Member
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Btw, I thought everyone would find this interesting. Another professional career satisfaction survey: Half of lawyers are dissatisfied with their careers and only 4/10 would recommend a legal career to others. http://legalcareers.about.com/b/2008...tisfaction.htm http://www.abajournal.com/magazine/a...al_profession/ Quote:
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#37 | |
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1K Member
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#38 | |
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1K Member
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"Trapped" is a state of mind.
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#39 |
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1K Member
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This link is on the page OP pasted, but it will take you directly to the comparison charts breaking down the survey according to various specialties:
http://www.medscape.com/features/sli...lk&firstbullet Last edited by Dharma; 06-02-2012 at 01:30 PM. |
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#40 | |
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I KNOW NOTHING
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#41 |
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...is a bird.
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An older, not-quite-happy-seeming male OB/GYN strongly hinted that I should stay away from medicine. I hear it may not be a surprising point-of-view from this particular doctor population.
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#42 |
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MS-3
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As an anecdote I know quite a few OB/GYNs that enjoy their job. I think a lot of it is situational and dictated in large part by administration, location, and patient population.
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#43 | |
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OMS-2
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Of course, my mother didn't go to law school so she started debt free. In many states you can study law on your own, under the guidance of an attorney (who cannot charge you for doing so), and sit for the bar exam. I don't find the satisfaction level among attorneys in this area to be very high. There are some who have really enjoyed their careers but there are certainly more who don't seem to at all. |
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CLASS OF 2015
"Trapped" is a state of mind.





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