
Why does everyone hate rural medicine? Particularly rural family medicine. It would be a shame to choose a school because of an interest in this field only to later regret it.
Why does everyone hate rural medicine? Particularly rural family medicine. It would be a shame to choose a school because of an interest in this field only to later regret it.
Because most people like CIVILIZATION
lol but yah.. Idk personally I grew up in the suburbs and have been in the city. When I go to the country, I go nuts.. Nothing intelligent to do. People live too far from each other. Idk not my cup of tea.
He said rural town are very leary or strangers, most of the people have lived there their whole life, if not generations there, and they may not trust a new person.
Eh. I grew up in a town of... ~1,200 or ~9000, depending on how you look at the town boundaries. Not always true. If you lived somewhere even smaller, I can see that being possible.
I'm sure not every rural town is leery of new people, he just cautioned this when thinking of rural medicine.
Why does everyone hate rural medicine? Particularly rural family medicine. It would be a shame to choose a school because of an interest in this field only to later regret it.
Try being one of three docs on a navy/airforce base on an island in the middle of nowhere. Population of 4000. Then they take away one doc to make budget.
I hope family medicine includes brain surgery for when they get hematomas from accidents!
Why does everyone hate rural medicine? Particularly rural family medicine. It would be a shame to choose a school because of an interest in this field only to later regret it.
Why does everyone hate rural medicine? Particularly rural family medicine. It would be a shame to choose a school because of an interest in this field only to later regret it.
Why does everyone hate rural medicine? Particularly rural family medicine. It would be a shame to choose a school because of an interest in this field only to later regret it.
Not everyone hates rural medicine. It has more to do with lifestyle, kind of like why some people want derm.
To deal with some misperceptions in this thread, though...
1. Just because an area is rural does not mean there's no access to a city. A small city might only be half an hour away, and most of what you need you'd only have to go into its suburbs for anyway. You don't have to go far from a city to qualify for underserved area loan repayment programs.
2. There are bars in rural areas. Clubs too - American Legion posts, VFW, Moose, Elks, whatever clubs, etc. They all have bars in them for their members. Don't assume every club is a nightclub.
3. Lack of Whole Foods is balanced by people who actually grow their own food. Enough that they'll share surplus with you, which also beats Whole Foods.
4. Children in rural areas travel a little farther, but go to good schools and end up in good colleges. It's the inner-city schools that do most of the failing. Rural children are usually more independent. They're not any less intelligent than the people living in cities.
5. Some rural economies are based on tourist activities. Vacations, hiking, biking, rafting, mountain climbing. If you want an adventurous lifestyle, that's available too.
Nothing intelligent to do.
because I get lonely and sometimes if I want to go to applebees past 10 oclock for some half priced boneless buffalo wings, I don't want to drive an hour to get some.

What you describe sounds idyllic. There are some towns that have the qualities you speak of, but the small towns I grew up around were poor (45% of the children were in poverty, 35% unemployment, major child abuse problems), had terrible schools, bad air quality (due to the burning of rice fields--asthma was extremely common) and only a few people farmed their own food, instead using extra land to grow crops to sell to big companies. It entirely depends on where you go. Rural areas need doctors regardless of how "nice" they are to live in... but there are definitely good small towns and bad ones. One should not go into rural medicine expecting a happy small town with joyous children and boutique farmers.
2. There are bars in rural areas. Clubs too - American Legion posts, VFW, Moose, Elks, whatever clubs, etc. They all have bars in them for their members. Don't assume every club is a nightclub.
3. Lack of Whole Foods is balanced by people who actually grow their own food. Enough that they'll share surplus with you, which also beats Whole Foods.
4. Children in rural areas travel a little farther, but go to good schools and end up in good colleges. It's the inner-city schools that do most of the failing. Rural children are usually more independent. They're not any less intelligent than the people living in cities.
Because I'm Chinese, I can't really see too many Ranch 99's or dim sum restaurants in rural places.
I wonder if rural towns are more likely to be racist toward Asians. My doctor told me that this is one of the reasons he didn't practice in the town he grew up in.

One other reason no one wants to go into rural medicine is that it is generally primary care with its attendant poor compensation. Most people really don't relish the thought of 80 hour weeks, awful call schedule and making 120K. Rural areas lack the cultural advantages of a city. There are no plays, limited ethnic cuisine, limited options in terms of houses of worship. Life in a rural town isn't that wonderful. If you have kids and want them to get a high powered high school education prepare to send them to boarding schools as many communities don't offer the APs and IBs that suburban districts do. Be prepared for poverty. In many rural areas the rate of poverty meets or exceeds that of the inner city. I grew up in a semi-rural area. I have contemplated rural practice and have found it to be too confining in terms of the ability to practice a specialty or subspecialty. However if you really love that lifestyle and are willing to put up with the issues of an aging and declining rural population good luck.
One other reason no one wants to go into rural medicine is that it is generally primary care with its attendant poor compensation. Most people really don't relish the thought of 80 hour weeks, awful call schedule and making 120K. Rural areas lack the cultural advantages of a city. There are no plays, limited ethnic cuisine, limited options in terms of houses of worship. Life in a rural town isn't that wonderful. If you have kids and want them to get a high powered high school education prepare to send them to boarding schools as many communities don't offer the APs and IBs that suburban districts do. Be prepared for poverty. In many rural areas the rate of poverty meets or exceeds that of the inner city. I grew up in a semi-rural area. I have contemplated rural practice and have found it to be too confining in terms of the ability to practice a specialty or subspecialty. However if you really love that lifestyle and are willing to put up with the issues of an aging and declining rural population good luck.
Okay, you're not really describing rural life so much as you're describing the poorest parts of Appalachia. True - rural areas tend to have a lower per capita income. Also true - cost of living is lower in general. You won't see people driving BMWs around, but you also won't see the boarded windows of the inner city.
Okay, you're not really describing rural life so much as you're describing the poorest parts of Appalachia. True - rural areas tend to have a lower per capita income. Also true - cost of living is lower in general. You won't see people driving BMWs around, but you also won't see the boarded windows of the inner city.
Rural poverty is different and variable.
Uh-huh. Yet, you continue to focus on the absolute poorest areas.
Believe me, I'm from a rural area. I know about the issues with small farms, and honestly, I'm one of those young adults who is never going to come back home. Also, not all rural areas rely solely on agriculture.
Uh-huh. Yet, you continue to focus on the absolute poorest areas.
Believe me, I'm from a rural area. I know about the issues with small farms, and honestly, I'm one of those young adults who is never going to come back home. Also, not all rural areas rely solely on agriculture.
One other reason no one wants to go into rural medicine is that it is generally primary care with its attendant poor compensation. Most people really don't relish the thought of 80 hour weeks, awful call schedule and making 120K. Rural areas lack the cultural advantages of a city. There are no plays, limited ethnic cuisine, limited options in terms of houses of worship. Life in a rural town isn't that wonderful. If you have kids and want them to get a high powered high school education prepare to send them to boarding schools as many communities don't offer the APs and IBs that suburban districts do. Be prepared for poverty. In many rural areas the rate of poverty meets or exceeds that of the inner city. I grew up in a semi-rural area. I have contemplated rural practice and have found it to be too confining in terms of the ability to practice a specialty or subspecialty. However if you really love that lifestyle and are willing to put up with the issues of an aging and declining rural population good luck.
One other reason no one wants to go into rural medicine is that it is generally primary care with its attendant poor compensation. Most people really don't relish the thought of 80 hour weeks, awful call schedule and making 120K. Rural areas lack the cultural advantages of a city. There are no plays, limited ethnic cuisine, limited options in terms of houses of worship. Life in a rural town isn't that wonderful. If you have kids and want them to get a high powered high school education prepare to send them to boarding schools as many communities don't offer the APs and IBs that suburban districts do. Be prepared for poverty. In many rural areas the rate of poverty meets or exceeds that of the inner city. I grew up in a semi-rural area. I have contemplated rural practice and have found it to be too confining in terms of the ability to practice a specialty or subspecialty. However if you really love that lifestyle and are willing to put up with the issues of an aging and declining rural population good luck.
To MLT2MT2DO if you read my statement I said that people weren't interested in rural areas because many people aren't interested in being PCPs period. There was no mention of relative compensation. I stated a major drawback was being a PCP with the attendant poorer pay. In addition to poorer pay in relation to specialties were the notoriously long hours.
There is often a lot of unusual pathology as well due to the infrequency with which patients seek medical treatment as well as consanguinity leading to often rare diagnoses.