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This might be difficult to answer, since rarely will one person go to both programs, but perhaps people might have an idea based on observation.
I believe they are quite similar as some schools have med students and dental students together with the same curriculum for the first 2 years.This might be difficult to answer, since rarely will one person go to both programs, but perhaps people might have an idea based on observation.
Why the career switch?Thank you all for the responses so far. They were very helpful to me (and probably anyone else wondering the same thing).
On another note, I'm assuming the first two years of either program might be just a little easier for someone who already attended a PA program?
Worst job according to who? I always thought pedodontists had the worst job 😉Brothers are MD's, I'm a DDS student, both have their challenges, but I would say that being at the top of your class in dental school is another animal as your hand/lab skills are taken into consideration. I can do didactic courses all day long, like most students at this level, as we're all trained that way in college; but having to put in extra time to do things like wax-ups, preparations, restorations, etc and maintain a 4.0 is very challenging. It's pretty difficult to be good at all of it, whereas in med school you don't worry about such stuff you just study your butt off, and they give you time to do it. Most dental programs are all day 8-5 with labs everyday with less time to study for exams.
Med school is probably more stressful, as everyone is competing to get somewhere, and dental school has a lot more guys who can screw around b/c they just need to pass and start working as a general dentist, but I would say that trying to get into the really competitive dental residencies is just as stressful as all of it. It's all about what you want. For dental students the worst job coming out is a general dentist, and my friend just made 330k last year, not bad for 4 years and no residency.
Why the career switch?
Big Hoss
On another note, I'm assuming the first two years of either program might be just a little easier for someone who already attended a PA program?
PA means something else entirely (to most people), and I think people might now have different opinions to give you hahaI'm a pathologist assistant.
lol, you are probably right, should have specified.PA means something else entirely (to most people), and I think people might now have different opinions to give you haha
Yo, its H/P/F which does make a difference depending on where you wish to specialize. No ranking though, which is good or bad depending on your personal views regarding that. As a graduate from UCLA I can certainly say it sucked but there is some value from being treated like garbage for years in terms of how it can make future crappy situations seem not so bad because it may not equate to that of the UCLA experience if one were so fortunate to experience themselves.
Now, after having been to med school, I can see how different and better students are treated at a med school compared to a dental school. After my first week at med school I was like Holy **** is this how a health profession school is supposed to be like!? Talk about med students whining and being babied man, what a joke that is. Funny thing is they don't know nor can understand how good they actually have it.