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- Oct 31, 2010
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I go to a prestigious enough undergrad that I could possibly land a job at McKinsey, Bain, Booz, BCG, etc. (and I am a quantitative business major anyway). I really do want to be a physician, but I definitely hate the fact that I will be dirt poor until I am 30. I come from a low class family and have had to struggle with finances all my life (working jobs in high school and college). I am starting to think it might be worth it to look into other careers, even though I had been dead set on medicine for the past 4 years (taken MCAT, gotten research/clinical/volunteering experiences, ready to apply this cycle).
I realized that I really enjoy solving quantitative problems, and I like working things out in excel (as I have found from doing my independent research and other various times I have had to use excel for school). I also like analytical work, research, and like the idea of finding inefficiencies to correct them. A lot of the attributes needed to be a good ibanker/consultant are the same as the ones needed to be a good doctor (hard working attitude, strong ethics, great reasoning abilities, great communication skills, etc.).
I love taking care of sick people (as I have found out through my volunteering), and I love science, so it's not a very easy decision for me. Any input?
I realized that I really enjoy solving quantitative problems, and I like working things out in excel (as I have found from doing my independent research and other various times I have had to use excel for school). I also like analytical work, research, and like the idea of finding inefficiencies to correct them. A lot of the attributes needed to be a good ibanker/consultant are the same as the ones needed to be a good doctor (hard working attitude, strong ethics, great reasoning abilities, great communication skills, etc.).
I love taking care of sick people (as I have found out through my volunteering), and I love science, so it's not a very easy decision for me. Any input?