Bump.
I have a few questions regarding pursuing an MD/PhD in biostatistics... Really look forward to hearing your responses.
I am currently pursuing my MSPH in Biostatistics in the Philippines (though I am from the US). After finishing my degree, I will attend medical school in the US. Originally, I had decided to study biostatistics out-of-interest and because I received a scholarship for my glide year, but I am truly enjoying the theoretical coursework and am now considering studying biostatistics when I enroll in medical school. The applied problem areas also interest me deeply, particularly genomics and environmental health. Since I will already have a master's degree by the time I matriculate into med school, it seems that the next logical step would be to shoot for a PhD. The problem is though that I am a non-traditional student in my late 20's. I want to have a family and need to start making an income and this would prolong my non-income-generating years...
My eventual career goal in getting an MD/PhD would be either working/researching biostatistics while practicing in an academic hospital or consulting for industry (e.g. pharma or biotech) while practicing.
Questions:
1) Is pursuing an MD/PhD at my age impractical?
2) Can you do a fellowship in biostatistics that would get you to the same place as an MD/PhD? I have tried searching for "biostatistics fellowships" and the ones I have seen are for post-docs.
3) Assuming I did pursue a PhD, would I be able to bypass the master's level courses given my MSPH? If so and assuming that I work diligently and do not burn out, what is a reasonable estimate for the number of years I could shave off the dual degree? Could it be done in 6 years?
Thanks so much for your responses.
People in your situations very often have similar questions. While I'd love to tell you that yes, great, go for what you truly love, I think it's much more helpful if you actually get some useful, albeit hard to swallow advice. Keep in mind my background (graduated MD/PhD with a PhD in a related field, machine learning, now in residency.).
(1) Honestly, I recommend against people doing an MD/PhD at the age of 30+, especially if you haven't cracked the pre-med reqs. It's at least 7-8s, tag on 3-6 years of residency, you are into your mid-40s. This is incompatible with what your life's goals are, which is to have children and a family in your 30s. The primary goal right now for you is to figure out what your goals are: is it to be a physician scientist at all cost, or is it just something nice that you might consider doing, and how important is a family to you.
(2) With an MD, you do a fellowship in a specific clinical discipline, with a component of research, and learn the tools required to do the research you need. Most MDs don't do a lot of statistics because they are focused on the clinical/logistic/which questions to ask aspect of a clinical trial, as opposed to trial methodology and statistical analysis.
(3) Generally speaking there's very little room for shaving off years in an MD/PhD. Do NOT expect that a masters degree, especially one from the Philippines, will carry you very far in a US PhD program.
Given that you want to eventually work in the US (which I'm not sure is true from what you said), you need to get US credentials as much and as soon as possible. In your case I think the best option is to apply for a PhD program in biostatistics in the US. For a variety of reasons, these programs are not very competitive in general, but this line of work is highly in demand right now and the salaries coming out are high, and there's no debt.