

Do you already have a law degree or contemplating getting it and then going to medicsl school ?my question is, will pursuing a JD and expressing interest in medical patents give an edge/help me get into medical school? do they like to accept a student here and there with a law degree to do this, or will this have no affect on my competitiveness at all? 513/3.6, reapplicant from before law school
update: and does anyone have any advice on how to 'frame' my application using my law degree? should I talk about only patents or also other things like health policy? what about being an actual doctor?I have not applied yet
I'm a first year law studentDo you already have a law degree or contemplating getting it and then going to medicsl school ?
An unused law degree will not increase your competitiveness. If anything people are gonna question it. Why would you get a law degree if you were interested in pursuing medicine?my question is, will pursuing a JD and expressing interest in medical patents give an edge/help me get into medical school? do they like to accept a student here and there with a law degree to do this, or will this have no affect on my competitiveness at all? 513/3.6, reapplicant from before law school
update: and does anyone have any advice on how to 'frame' my application using my law degree? should I talk about only patents or also other things like health policy? what about being an actual doctor?I have not applied yet
.An unused law degree will not increase your competitiveness. If anything people are gonna question it. Why would you get a law degree if you were interested in pursuing medicine?
...you want to learn both? You're interested in going to both law school and medical school? You plan on pursuing both law and medicine because... you've always been academically interested in both?the true answer is I guess I'm a polymath with a lot of interests. I've always been academically interested in both law and science/medicine and I just wasn't sure what career path I wanted, but now I want to learn both
Sounds great. It also sounds like you are a little bit all over the place, which will not give you an advantage in something like med school admissions, which are intensely competitive. Med schools are looking for a level of commitment that a polymath will be unable to demonstrate, by definition. Given the relative difficulty and competitiveness of admission into the two professional schools today, my guess would be that law schools would probably be very impressed by MD applicants; med schools not so much with JDs, and that's without the stigma associated with being a reapplicant.the true answer is I guess I'm a polymath with a lot of interests. I've always been academically interested in both law and science/medicine and I just wasn't sure what career path I wanted, but now I want to learn both
Aren't we all!I guess I'm a polymath
I am not. My backup plan was phd in mathematics/biochem if Med school doesn’t work out . But I am horrible and pretty much everything else. hahaha . Like, horrificAren't we all!
Or are a degree collector/professional student.Actually, I think you’ll be spending lots of time trying to convince ADCOMS during interviews that you aren’t running from Law to Medicine.
I so wanted to say that.🤣Or are a degree collector/professional student.
Well yeah doctors don’t want to be sued lol.I met a JD/MD who completed JD prior to graduating medical school. They had no regrets, got a lot of attention for their prior education, and encouraged me to pursue a JD if I found it fascinating.
My experience is that being interesting on the application trail is a huge boon. JD/MDs have unique career opportunities post training as well.
Doctors tend to hate lawyers, though. lol
It's a hindrance if it looks like you're fleeing a professiont hat is glutted and has poor job prospects. IAs I like to say. you have to look like you're running TO Medicine and no merely running away from Law/Pharmacy etc"But at what point does a former job become a hindrance? Like why is being a specifically a job that would be a hindrance in medical school admissions anyways?
In OPs case it isn’t a former job. I don’t think he’s graduated yet. Then there is the bar.But at what point does a former job become a hindrance? Like why is being a specifically a job that would be a hindrance in medical school admissions anyways?
OPs a 3rd year law student so they're probably planning to apply next year.In OPs case it isn’t a former job. I don’t think he’s graduated yet. Then there is the bar.
It's not clear what's motivating you to become a physician and how you intend to use your degrees. If anythign, it seems like you don't know why you want to get an MD.rising 3L
OP is actually going to be a reapplicant. He applied and wasn’t accepted before he went to Law School. (“513/3.6, reapplicant from before law school”) So now he seems to be circling back to medicine. But why did he do law in the first place(because he had to keep busy, parent pressure, who knows) and why not practice a few years before jumping into 8+ year journey to medicine.It's not clear what's motivating you to become a physician and how you intend to use your degrees. If anythign, it seems like you don't know why you want to get an MD.
If you come across as a degree collector or someone fleeing legal practice as has been said above, you're going to have a problem. If you come across as someone who has a legal degree, but is changing directions because you've concluded that medicine is your calling and a passion and you have the experience to back up that claim, then your legal background will not be held against you. If you want to use your legal education to influence healthcare policy while also being a practicing physician that could also be plausible approach.
I'm not encouraging you to just mouth these lines if they aren't genuine. Why now that you (almost) have a legal degree do you want to pay for and go to medical school for 4 years? Academic interest? or avoiding adulthood? Or?
Why not brush up on core sciences yourself on the side? If you went to a brand name law school, you can break into any one of these options with good networking without another degree (I’m assuming you have at least a science undergrad):the true answer is I guess I'm a polymath with a lot of interests. I've always been academically interested in both law and science/medicine and I just wasn't sure what career path I wanted, but now I want to learn both
In the abstract, this sounds great. In practice, did you ever successfully work with someone who jumped from a failed med school application right into law school, and then right back into medicine?Good questions. I think more important than why he went into law is why OP wants to do medicine now. And how has he tested that interest?
I saw that he was a reapplicant, and it's good that you highlighted that fact in your post. However if I were reviewing his file, I'd like to know what's his motivation today. That fact that OP applied several years ago, got rejected, and then went in a different direction is less important to me than why medicine today. And how committed is OP today. We've worked with non-traditional applicants who came from law and engineering and different fields. Their current motivation and commitment as well as how their previous education and work experience are going to make them better physicians is usually more relevant than why they did what they did four or more years ago. The latter illuminates their journey, but that current motivation is primary.