Last edited:
Except this person isn't giving up a seat...they're regretting their decision because of how the first two years of medical education are.If youre not in it to help future patients, give your seat to someone else.
Except this person isn't giving up a seat...they're regretting their decision because of how the first two years of medical education are.
I had an engineering background, and it seemed like the easier route and it seemed like I had made an awful mistake.
Yes, the first two years are regurgitation. The third year not so much. Except for the exam/shelf stress, the clinical portion was pretty enjoyable.
Get that MD!
And yes, I did have a friend who took a year off to work in biotech b/w third and fourth year. Now she's a derm.
...That's my primary goal, but I also want to be intellectually stimulated and use my strength which is quantitative problem solving...dude/girl...just curious r u saying doctors are not intellectually stimulated?I do want to help patients. That's my primary goal, but I also want to be intellectually stimulated and use my strength which is quantitative problem solving. I'm just realizing there're other ways to do it. Are you saying the people who created the davinci surgical robot and brought it to
Omg you are either full of yourself or don’t really understand the real medicine. Sure you can be a mediocre doctor and regurgitate the guidelines on every single patient treating them the same. But to be a good or best doctor you really need to critically think and at times, deviate from the guideline...guideline may not always the best thing.I'm just saying I don't find clinical medicine as intellectually stimulating as solving a math problem. You run tests, assess symptoms, create a differential, confirm a diagnosis, then give drugs based on what the NEJM tells you to give for that diagnosis. Evidence-based medicine just seems like a massive flowchart you follow.
I'd assume that med school would be done with. But we would need @Goro to respond with a more knowledgeable one-word answer 😀If I bug out, there's a huge risk of not being able to move up right? And I doubt med schools will accept me again if I quit once.
Disagree with this statement. Have friends and family who are engineering phds and professors.Doing a real engineering PhD is much more difficult than MD + residency, and the post degree job prospects aren't significantly different once you get to the management level. Also I see significant value in the MD, because it's so patient focused. If you're developing a solution and it isn't patient focused, it's not a worthwhile solution imo.
If you drop you out, your medical career is over.If I bug out, there's a huge risk of not being able to move up right? And I doubt med schools will accept me again if I quit once.
I'm just saying I don't find clinical medicine as intellectually stimulating as solving a math problem. You run tests, assess symptoms, create a differential, confirm a diagnosis, then give drugs based on what the NEJM tells you to give for that diagnosis. Evidence-based medicine just seems like a massive flowchart you follow.
Why'd you decide to leave industry for med school?
If youre not in it to help future patients, give your seat to someone else.
they could take a transfer studentwell that seat won't exactly go to anyone else
I kind of felt like that. Hated all of medical school. Just matched radiology with lots of potential for AI/machine learning. Also I tell all students to wait until the clinical years before deciding and try the electives that complement your background-rad onc, radiology, CT surgery, ortho,etc.
You don’t need to justify yourself; you don’t like clinical medicine, hey that is your choice but stick with it, you will have a ton of doors open for you when you get your MD.I do want to help patients. That's my primary goal, but I also want to be intellectually stimulated and use my strength which is quantitative problem solving. I'm just realizing there're other ways to do it. Are you saying the people who created the davinci surgical robot and brought it to market isn't helping patients?
I'm glad to hear this!Thank you all for your input. Given all these suggestions, I think I'll ride out medical school, and decide about residency when I have a few more years of experience. At the very least, I get an MD, get the opportunity to experience an amazing profession that so many people dream of being a part of, and realize it just isn't for me. Best case scenario, I find that there is someplace within medicine that I truly love, and I go down that path. I'll likely end somewhere in the middle where I can use my medical expertise for some positive purpose, just don't know where that is yet. There's obviously the cost of staying in med school, but based on how many people said they didn't like preclinical, it would not be smart to jump ship just yet.
P.S. What is a target school? Is it not a target relative to one's academic credentials, like we used to talk about "reach" and "safety" schools? Don't think I've heard that term before but from reading this thread I gather it's widely used.
You are not going to be solving practical problems regarding delivery of care, etc. You are going to be finding places to cut costs, cut corners, and cut jobs, busting out hospitals and practices for profit like Tony Soprano and making the people who do the actual work waste time with online training modules.