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Yeah, but you also have to consider that a lot of people don't want to be surgeons, and if you want to make much bigger dollars, you need to BUY a practice, which is significantly more debt. An OMFS practice that nets the owner 450K will probably cost 700K. If you are a double degree OMFS from a private school (dent and med) then you probably already have about 800K of debt. Even a single-degree OMFS will still have 500K from a private school. The only specialties that typically pay a stipend during training are OMFS and Pedo. Practically all other training programs charge tuition.
I think that dentistry overall used to be a better deal when:
1) The supply was decreased in the 1980s
2) The cost of education was practically nothing and,
3) Training programs paid a stipend, as they used to. Dental school funding has since dried up significantly.
4) Opening a practice was as easy as hanging a shingle.
If you consider that many general dental grads do a GPR and then spend a couple of years as an associate, medicine is a better financial deal, especially if you end up at a cheap school.
Okay I want to see what you would say to this. How about if you can afford to go to an in-state dental school that is 170K in tuition (in my case), no debt from ugrad, and then on top of that doing residency after dental school for a non-OMFS or Pedo specialty? Like endo or prostho? Forget about ortho. Nowa the days I doubt ortho is worth it. Do you think this deal is more worth it than medicine? I personally do. My instate medical school is roughly about the same...10k cheaper but with the compounded interest accrueing in residency, this would make the tuition much more expensive, probably 250K to 300K depending on the years of my residency. I figure I could accumulate just as much debt in dental WITH specializing as I would be spending in medicine but I would be done quicker assuming I don't do emergency medicine (sure as hell not doing primary care). This is also assuming I get into the specialty of my choice. But financially this is just as good. No?
