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- Oct 15, 2014
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I'm considering applying MD/PhD to do genomics/bioinformatics work, but having some trouble really nailing down my motivation for the dual degree / considering if it's worth it.
I find the current state of genomic research extremely fascinating. My long term goal would be tease out clinically relevant information from the increasing amounts of data we generate. I'm thinking biomarkers, epigenetics, etc. I work now in relatively "low-throughput" environment doing biomarker stuff and enjoy it well enough.
The problem comes when I imagine my actual role in everything. If I were to go for it, my principle interest would be on the algorithmic/statistical side, and I'm also broadly interested (and fairly inexperienced) in HPC/Storage problems. While I've come to appreciate the intricacies of the wet lab side of the work, I have little interest in that playing a big role in my career.
Thing is, I can't come up with a good reason why your computational geneticist and physician need to be the same person. At best it seems like a medical education would be a tool for nailing down experimental design, but that's a lot of time spent for what could probably be accomplished by a long conversation with a physician. Clinical access is a pro too, but it seems like with the current trend that will be less and less of an issue.
I know I didn't bring it up, but I also really want to be a practicing physician, have wanted to since I was 5 etc etc. I waver back and forth between wanting to be the practicing physician with a strong scientific bent, and the clinically focused scientist. While the MD/PhD certainly seems like a tool to bridge that gap, I can't help but feel like it might just more be a way to delay the decision...
Any thoughts? Particularly appreciate insight from anyone in the field.
I should probably add, my major was totally unrelated in college and with the pretty stringent math requirements for a lot of programs, I think I'd need to do a masters before applying MD/PhD or PhD. I don't necessarily mind spending the time, but given the funding environment and the general outlook, I can't say I'd be happy to spend all that time to end up doing a job I could have done without all that training.
I find the current state of genomic research extremely fascinating. My long term goal would be tease out clinically relevant information from the increasing amounts of data we generate. I'm thinking biomarkers, epigenetics, etc. I work now in relatively "low-throughput" environment doing biomarker stuff and enjoy it well enough.
The problem comes when I imagine my actual role in everything. If I were to go for it, my principle interest would be on the algorithmic/statistical side, and I'm also broadly interested (and fairly inexperienced) in HPC/Storage problems. While I've come to appreciate the intricacies of the wet lab side of the work, I have little interest in that playing a big role in my career.
Thing is, I can't come up with a good reason why your computational geneticist and physician need to be the same person. At best it seems like a medical education would be a tool for nailing down experimental design, but that's a lot of time spent for what could probably be accomplished by a long conversation with a physician. Clinical access is a pro too, but it seems like with the current trend that will be less and less of an issue.
I know I didn't bring it up, but I also really want to be a practicing physician, have wanted to since I was 5 etc etc. I waver back and forth between wanting to be the practicing physician with a strong scientific bent, and the clinically focused scientist. While the MD/PhD certainly seems like a tool to bridge that gap, I can't help but feel like it might just more be a way to delay the decision...
Any thoughts? Particularly appreciate insight from anyone in the field.
I should probably add, my major was totally unrelated in college and with the pretty stringent math requirements for a lot of programs, I think I'd need to do a masters before applying MD/PhD or PhD. I don't necessarily mind spending the time, but given the funding environment and the general outlook, I can't say I'd be happy to spend all that time to end up doing a job I could have done without all that training.