- Joined
- Apr 2, 2008
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- 288
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Hello Doctors,
I'll make a long story as short as possible. I'm a PA student (age 30), graduating tomorrow. This past year, I interviewed at Lecom for the PA-->DO bridge. The bridge essentially cuts off the 4th year of med school. The bridge has 12 openings for PAs. 6 spots are designated for the primary care field (peds, geriatrics, IM, FP, ob-gyn) and 6 spots are undeclared (can pick any specialty). Also, these bridge students must complete a DO residency. As of today, these are my options: The 4-yr pathway is not available to me (long story), but I can be accepted to the primary care spots, but there are NO undeclared spots left. This means I can do the bridge, be done in med school in 3 years, but I must choose either FP, IM, ob-gyn, peds, or geriatrics.
1. Initially when I wanted to return to school, it was for surgery only. However, if I went back for surgery, I would now have to wait a year + apply to another school, 4 yrs med + 4-6 residency = 11 years. I would be 41 years old before I was a surgical attending. However, during my 3 months on a primary care rotation, my preceptor did MANY surgical procedures (I&D, Cysts removals, injections everywhere, derm, scopes, etc) that I didn't know you could really do in FP, mostly because on my other FP rotations, the doc would refer out for any procedure. I loved how he incorporated so much surgery into the practice.
I'm concerned about debt, like everyone is. I've read many posts on the board, and seemingly, as a primary care doc, I would be able to get my loans paid off. I will be going into med school with $90,000 debt. The bridge program is 3 years, at approx. $31,000/yr. So I'm looking at probably $183,000, not including interests, fees, other expenses, so it will be well over $200k. Assuming my salary as a doc would be around $180-$200k, plus the tuition reimbursement, I "think" I should no problem paying off loans, and living a very comfortable life.
I find I'm most interested in surgery and surgical procedures, but I still like managing chronic disease, so I feel FP is "probably" the best route. Here are my questions:
1. As a FP with a FM residency, I can still practice in urgent care, ER, and IM correct? That's what's so intriguing about FP, I "think" I will have the opportunity to practice in many different settings, correct? What other areas can I practice for extra money?
2. I'm not particularly interested in peds and ob-gyn, do you think I'm entering the wrong field because I'll see a lot of this demographic?
I strongly prefer the OP setting opposed to IP. I just feel painted into a corner because yes, I will be accepted to medical school and will achieve my dream of becoming a doctor, but I have to pick my field now, and also I have to complete a DO residency, and cannot do any fellowships/additional training (bc it would be considered breach of contract). I'm not sure if I should just apply broadly to more schools next year, which will allow me to apply to any residency I want (in case I change my mind in the future), but I feel like I'm getting too old to continue delaying my future. All comments welcome. Thank you for reading.
I'll make a long story as short as possible. I'm a PA student (age 30), graduating tomorrow. This past year, I interviewed at Lecom for the PA-->DO bridge. The bridge essentially cuts off the 4th year of med school. The bridge has 12 openings for PAs. 6 spots are designated for the primary care field (peds, geriatrics, IM, FP, ob-gyn) and 6 spots are undeclared (can pick any specialty). Also, these bridge students must complete a DO residency. As of today, these are my options: The 4-yr pathway is not available to me (long story), but I can be accepted to the primary care spots, but there are NO undeclared spots left. This means I can do the bridge, be done in med school in 3 years, but I must choose either FP, IM, ob-gyn, peds, or geriatrics.
1. Initially when I wanted to return to school, it was for surgery only. However, if I went back for surgery, I would now have to wait a year + apply to another school, 4 yrs med + 4-6 residency = 11 years. I would be 41 years old before I was a surgical attending. However, during my 3 months on a primary care rotation, my preceptor did MANY surgical procedures (I&D, Cysts removals, injections everywhere, derm, scopes, etc) that I didn't know you could really do in FP, mostly because on my other FP rotations, the doc would refer out for any procedure. I loved how he incorporated so much surgery into the practice.
I'm concerned about debt, like everyone is. I've read many posts on the board, and seemingly, as a primary care doc, I would be able to get my loans paid off. I will be going into med school with $90,000 debt. The bridge program is 3 years, at approx. $31,000/yr. So I'm looking at probably $183,000, not including interests, fees, other expenses, so it will be well over $200k. Assuming my salary as a doc would be around $180-$200k, plus the tuition reimbursement, I "think" I should no problem paying off loans, and living a very comfortable life.
I find I'm most interested in surgery and surgical procedures, but I still like managing chronic disease, so I feel FP is "probably" the best route. Here are my questions:
1. As a FP with a FM residency, I can still practice in urgent care, ER, and IM correct? That's what's so intriguing about FP, I "think" I will have the opportunity to practice in many different settings, correct? What other areas can I practice for extra money?
2. I'm not particularly interested in peds and ob-gyn, do you think I'm entering the wrong field because I'll see a lot of this demographic?
I strongly prefer the OP setting opposed to IP. I just feel painted into a corner because yes, I will be accepted to medical school and will achieve my dream of becoming a doctor, but I have to pick my field now, and also I have to complete a DO residency, and cannot do any fellowships/additional training (bc it would be considered breach of contract). I'm not sure if I should just apply broadly to more schools next year, which will allow me to apply to any residency I want (in case I change my mind in the future), but I feel like I'm getting too old to continue delaying my future. All comments welcome. Thank you for reading.