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Hello,
I graduated with a degree in Chemical Engineering back in '08. Worked for 1.5 years, laid off this january, job search has been absolutely brutal. I've done an analysis of job prospects within the industries I'm qualified for - realistically, with the number of jobs shed in '08 and '09 in those industries, we're looking at 5 or more years of extremely strong job growth until we get back to '07 levels. That's being optimistic. Realistically, it's closer to 10. Given how competitive it's become even for mediocre positions paying 40-50k compared to several years ago, i think it's time to retrain or pursue a different career path.
Here's the kicker: My UG GPA is a 2.6. No upward trend. Most of the blame is on me - I idiotically thought an engineering degree alone would make me immune to market fluctuations. Guess I should have paid closer attention to the trends this past decade. Myself, along with many of my unemployed/downsized/underemployed eng friends from college, are kicking ourselves in the foot right now for thinking this. To be fair, however, when taking ochem during UG it's not as if that was a higher priority for me than the 4 other weed out engineering classes i was probably taking concurrently. A Chem E curriculum is notorious for its grading difficulty.
What are my options realistically with this GPA? I know most MD schools in America are out of the question. How likely will DO, Podiatry, Optometry, or foreign medical schools grant me admissions? And by foreign medical schools, I mean accredited institutions which have a high rate of passing American board exams? I'm not limiting this to just the Carribean...Australia, Eastern Europe, India, etc. Anywhere I can get by just knowing english
Also, how do you see recent changes within the healthcare system affecting employment and salary prospects for general practitioners?
I am somewhat perplexed by the advice that you are being given because I was in a similar position and everyone was telling me that I could get into an MD program.
I almost finished my 1st BA with a 2.5, dropped out my final semester and returned a few years later to finish it and another BA in Chemistry. I will have 203 credits at the end of this summer session due to the joint majors, my GPA should be at 3.04. It's taking 75 credits at 4.0 to bring my GPA to 3.0 level. This is something you should consider doing. Did you already take the premed courses? Perhaps you could take some advanced biology and physics courses to get you back into the science groove. I was lucky - though I studied a ton - to get a 40 on the MCAT. For people with low MCATs, this is especially important. I advise raising your undergrad GPA and kicking ass on the MCAT. Good luck!
I am somewhat perplexed by the advice that you are being given because I was in a similar position and everyone was telling me that I could get into an MD program.
I almost finished my 1st BA with a 2.5, dropped out my final semester and returned a few years later to finish it and another BA in Chemistry. I will have 203 credits at the end of this summer session due to the joint majors, my GPA should be at 3.04. It's taking 75 credits at 4.0 to bring my GPA to 3.0 level. This is something you should consider doing. Did you already take the premed courses? Perhaps you could take some advanced biology and physics courses to get you back into the science groove. I was lucky - though I studied a ton - to get a 40 on the MCAT. For people with low MCATs, this is especially important. I advise raising your undergrad GPA and kicking ass on the MCAT. Good luck!
Entering medicine just for the nuts 'n' bolts of having a stable job is a really poor reason to enter it.
Bottom-line: I think your motivation and qualifications for entering medicine are poor.
I disagree, to an extent. Yes, you should be in medicine for the right reasons, and there are tons of hoops to jump through, and unless you in it for the long haul, you shouldn't be wasting your time, but to suggest like we are all like mother teresa over here doing it for not gain of our own (ie, steady pay-check, & job security) is just nonsense.
Steady paycheck and job security in medicine is a myth. Some doctors are compensated as independent contractors. Others earn based entirely on what they can bring in.
You say, sure, that's okay because people will always need health care? But what if they can't pay? The changes that are coming to the system will produce results no can predict. To count on a steady paycheck and job security amidst that uncertainty is foolish.
I don't support the new legislation, but I wouldn't hide behind it as a reason not to enter the profession.
however, i don't feel like my work benefits any one (well, other than myself).
My legislation comment too, I support the idea, its more of just splitting hairs in how it shakes down, at least for me. But that debate is for another thread.
Hello,
I graduated with a degree in Chemical Engineering back in '08. Worked for 1.5 years, laid off this january, job search has been absolutely brutal. I've done an analysis of job prospects within the industries I'm qualified for - realistically, with the number of jobs shed in '08 and '09 in those industries, we're looking at 5 or more years of extremely strong job growth until we get back to '07 levels. That's being optimistic. Realistically, it's closer to 10. Given how competitive it's become even for mediocre positions paying 40-50k compared to several years ago, i think it's time to retrain or pursue a different career path.
Here's the kicker: My UG GPA is a 2.6. No upward trend. Most of the blame is on me - I idiotically thought an engineering degree alone would make me immune to market fluctuations. Guess I should have paid closer attention to the trends this past decade. Myself, along with many of my unemployed/downsized/underemployed eng friends from college, are kicking ourselves in the foot right now for thinking this. To be fair, however, when taking ochem during UG it's not as if that was a higher priority for me than the 4 other weed out engineering classes i was probably taking concurrently. A Chem E curriculum is notorious for its grading difficulty.
What are my options realistically with this GPA? I know most MD schools in America are out of the question. How likely will DO, Podiatry, Optometry, or foreign medical schools grant me admissions? And by foreign medical schools, I mean accredited institutions which have a high rate of passing American board exams? I'm not limiting this to just the Carribean...Australia, Eastern Europe, India, etc. Anywhere I can get by just knowing english
Also, how do you see recent changes within the healthcare system affecting employment and salary prospects for general practitioners?
Systematic risk is present in almost any industry, id be willing to bet that healthcare directly may benefit from the recent government intervention. Medicare may cap insurance reimbursement and reduce physician pay, but they also are
guaranteeing 30 million people on payment. If anything, the low-income patient physicians will directly benefit from this, while hurting higher earning specialists.
Entering medicine just for the nuts 'n' bolts of having a stable job is a really poor reason to enter it. The continual hoop-jumping one must endure cannot be sustained on the mere pragmatics of keeping a job. They would sniff it out of you during the application process.
While engineering fluctuates, the demand for it will still be there. Just means you have to tolerate some years being out of work or hustling harder. This cycle is a lot worse than others, and so things seems a lot worse LT than they probably really are.
After the Internet bust, untold numbers of computer engineers lost their jobs. Those who persevered to survive it continued their livelihoods.
Bottom-line: I think your motivation and qualifications for entering medicine are poor.