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that is a GREAT answer. Your primary focus is to take care of patients, and you want to use research as an additional tool to advance your field and to give your patients the better care they deserve.Hi, in my ps I talk a lot about how I initially got interested in medicine through research. Also a decent amount of my activities (like 1/3rd) fall under research. All the research is clinical though with patients. So I'm afraid I'll be asked why NOT MD/pHD?
My reasoning for why not MD/PhD over MD is that while I am interested in clinical research, most MD/PhDs spend 50% of their time (or greater, some on here say 80-90%) of their time doing research. While I would want to spend the majority of my time doing clinical and maybe 10-30% of it doing research. Is that a fair answer? And are my assumptions about MD/pHD even correct?
You're more likely to be asked "why not PhD"?Hi, in my ps I talk a lot about how I initially got interested in medicine through research. Also a decent amount of my activities (like 1/3rd) fall under research. All the research is clinical though with patients. So I'm afraid I'll be asked why NOT MD/pHD?
My reasoning for why not MD/PhD over MD is that while I am interested in clinical research, most MD/PhDs spend 50% of their time (or greater, some on here say 80-90%) of their time doing research. While I would want to spend the majority of my time doing clinical and maybe 10-30% of it doing research. Is that a fair answer? And are my assumptions about MD/pHD even correct?