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Can anyone tell me some of the pros and cons of getting an MD/PhD? Also, what's the difference between MD/PhD and MSTP?
Can anyone tell me some of the pros and cons of getting an MD/PhD? Also, what's the difference between MD/PhD and MSTP?
Can anyone tell me some of the pros and cons of getting an MD/PhD?
MSTP and MD/PhD for the most part are the same thing. However, many schools will permit students to go for a PhD while not accepting them into the fully-funded MSTP program. Thus, you can still do a PhD but they will only fund you for your PhD studies.
In my opinion, I do not think an MD/PhD is of much use. I know more MD's that do research, even basic science research, than MD/PhD's. Due to the time committment I don't think it is worth it. You can still do research going the MD route. Many medical residencies have a research year (the competitive ones) and if you are really dedicated to bench research then you can even apply for NIH postdoc funding (like what the PhDs can get).
A recent Nobel prize winner, Peter Agre, discovered aquaporins and he is only an MD. Just goes to show you DO NOT need a PhD to do quality basic science research (you just need to good science foundation which med school gives you in the first two years coupled with good ideas and a good mentor).
As others have said, it is dependent on your goals. If you are interested in basic science research in an academic setting, there's no better training. If you want to do something else - pure clinician for example - then you don't need it. Given the opportunity cost of the extra 3-4 years, the funding for the MD/PhD makes it so that you break even, no more.Can anyone tell me some of the pros and cons of getting an MD/PhD?...
Where the money comes from, and sometimes the structure of the program. MSTPs are funded by the NIH, give you a full ride, and are given to a small number of schools with long histories in research. Any med school can have an MD/PhD program, and many do, but they are funded through the school, separate from a MSTP. At some schools you'll be logistically/financially no different than a MSTP student. Some schools have you pay for the first two years of med school and then fund you for the rest. Check with the schools your interested in for their MD/PhD program specifics....Also, what's the difference between MD/PhD and MSTP?...
MSTP and MD/PhD for the most part are the same thing. However, many schools will permit students to go for a PhD while not accepting them into the fully-funded MSTP program. Thus, you can still do a PhD but they will only fund you for your PhD studies.
In my opinion, I do not think an MD/PhD is of much use. I know more MD's that do research, even basic science research, than MD/PhD's. Due to the time committment I don't think it is worth it. You can still do research going the MD route. Many medical residencies have a research year (the competitive ones) and if you are really dedicated to bench research then you can even apply for NIH postdoc funding (like what the PhDs can get).
A recent Nobel prize winner, Peter Agre, discovered aquaporins and he is only an MD. Just goes to show you DO NOT need a PhD to do quality basic science research (you just need to good science foundation which med school gives you in the first two years coupled with good ideas and a good mentor).
DeadCactus,
If you want to be a physician, do not get a PhD in Biomed Eng first. I don't know if you can do an MD/PhD with the PhD in engineering - you could probably work something out. It sounds like you have several interests in engineering.
You need to ask yourself how you would like to be spending your time later in life. Running a lab (successfully) and doing consulting work would leave very little time for practicing medicine. This is especially difficult for surgeons, who need to do a lot of procedures to get good and stay good at what they do.
Many people feel outside pressures and expectations to go into medicine rather than science or research. Be honest and true to yourself when evaluating what you want to do - in the end you will be happier and save yourself some hard times. Good luck.
DeadCactus,
If you want to be a physician, do not get a PhD in Biomed Eng first. I don't know if you can do an MD/PhD with the PhD in engineering - you could probably work something out. It sounds like you have several interests in engineering.
You need to ask yourself how you would like to be spending your time later in life. Running a lab (successfully) and doing consulting work would leave very little time for practicing medicine. This is especially difficult for surgeons, who need to do a lot of procedures to get good and stay good at what they do.
Many people feel outside pressures and expectations to go into medicine rather than science or research. Be honest and true to yourself when evaluating what you want to do - in the end you will be happier and save yourself some hard times. Good luck.
I'm an MD/PhD student right now, and let me tell you, unless you are pressed for money and don't want a bunch of loans, it's a waste of time.
I just said that it is difficult to run a lab, do consulting work, and do clinical work.
A recent Nobel prize winner, Peter Agre, discovered aquaporins and he is only an MD. Just goes to show you DO NOT need a PhD to do quality basic science research.
does the trend you're talking about apply to surgical specialties as well? (with regards to difficulty in obtaining a faculty position without the phd)
I would think that surgical specialities would be more resistant to requiring PhDs of their faculty for the plain reason that it takes a lot of time in the OR to be a surgeon and to remain a good surgeon. You need to be able to churn out those patients. Similarly, they don't have as much time to run a research lab (hiring/firing, writing grants, writing papers). That's not to say that they aren't productive researchers; they just have someone else do the dirty work! 😎does the trend you're talking about apply to surgical specialties as well? (with regards to difficulty in obtaining a faculty position without the phd)
I briefly worked with a surgeon who published pretty regularily and was in the OR about 3 days/week and had 2 days/week of "admin"/research work. He had an excellent admin staff that handled all the "paperwork" aspects of his academic position. His science was tight as was his medicine, but unfortunately he was a micromanger to the nth degree, along with all those other endearing qualities of surgeonsI would think that surgical specialities would be more resistant to requiring PhDs of their faculty for the plain reason that it takes a lot of time in the OR to be a surgeon and to remain a good surgeon. You need to be able to churn out those patients. Similarly, they don't have as much time to run a research lab (hiring/firing, writing grants, writing papers). That's not to say that they aren't productive researchers; they just have someone else do the dirty work! 😎 .
does the trend you're talking about apply to surgical specialties as well? (with regards to difficulty in obtaining a faculty position without the phd)
If you think about it, IM's been doing something similar all along. Most specialists will have to go through a 3 year fellowship before they can call themselves a cardiologist, hematologsit, etc., or six years (3 + 3), most of which have research requirements. Surgical specialities are 5 + 1 for fellowship specialization, and both residency and fellowship require research. To me it seems to be a wash....Some have fewer and tend to de-emphasize research overall, like ortho and plastics. Surgical fields are (perhaps surprisingly) ahead of medical fields in requiring research during residency--for example, almost all gen surg and neurosurg programs have 2 years of research required during residency. I think that surgeons have a lot to offer in medical research, both in terms of personality and clinical perspective, but it's true that they tend to be busier clinically and have less time to run a lab.
If you think about it, IM's been doing something similar all along. Most specialists will have to go through a 3 year fellowship before they can call themselves a cardiologist, hematologsit, etc., or six years (3 + 3), most of which have research requirements. Surgical specialities are 5 + 1 for fellowship specialization, and both residency and fellowship require research. To me it seems to be a wash.
I am surprised with what you say about ortho - I've met a number of former engineers who became orthopods, and there's a great deal of stuff in the field to be nerdy about. 😎
Someone else earlier on this thread pointed out another thread with some more useful discussion on whether to MD-PhD or not to MD-PhD.
Of course you can do some research with an MD. The purpose of getting a PhD in addition to an MD is not to give you a "research license." Dual-degree programs are for people who want to make *serious* basic science contributions to their respective clinical fields, who fully intend to practice medicine in an academic setting, and who envision spending 40-60% of their time running an NIH-funded research lab. Realize that this is entirely different from being an MD in an academic dept. who does a few PCRs during his/her one post-call "research afternoon" per week. There's nothing wrong with wanting that career either--it's just totally different from what an MD-PhD will prepare you to be able to do. I would characterize it like this--an MD will probably prepare you to be able to identify some markers for a disease, while the PhD will prepare you to figure out how those markers are mechanistically related to the disease. That's a gross oversimplification, but it gives a flavor of the difference between the two types of training.
This statement deserves som clarification. In most medical schools, there are two academic tracks: 1) the physician scientist track, in which one spends 40-60% of one's time doing research, either basic or clinical and 2) the clinical track, in which one devotes one's time to teaching medical students and residents and does little or no research, basic or clinical. In the physicial scientist track, your promotion depends upon how much money you bring in through grants. The research can be basic or clinical - the department that hires and promotes you does not care which you do, as long as you bring in the money. The amount of medicine you are obliged to practice depends on how much money in addition to the salary provided by your research grants you wish to make. In the clinical track, your promotion does not depend on your research output. Instead, it depends upon how much money you can make for your department by seeing patients and on your ability to train medical students, residents and fellows how to practice medicine. A clinical track physician may spend an afternoon in the lab once per week, but this does not fulfill any job requirement or help to advance one's career. Remember, as far as academic medicine is concerned, it's all about the money - not how much you'll make, but how much you can make for your department.
hi guys,
i was thinking about neurosurgery and getting a doctorate in neuroscience. if i do the md/phd would i still be taking part in the clinical roles or spending most of my time in the lab.
👍It would be extremely foolish IMHO to go 6-7 years of neurosurgery residency after a 8-10 yr MSTP and NOT do clinical work. Most neurosurgeons I know with a PhD spend most of their time doing surgery. If you want to do mostly research a neurology residency is 3 years (after internship, I believe).
👍
As much as we med students are masochists, there has to be a payoff eventually. You can only delay gratification and train and study for so long until you get tired of it.
hi guys,
i was thinking about neurosurgery and getting a doctorate in neuroscience. if i do the md/phd would i still be taking part in the clinical roles or spending most of my time in the lab.
This is my reason for not doing a MD/PhD. I got a ton of research experience through my job that I took to support my masters (yes, it's backwards, and no, my advisor did not fund me). At this point I'd have to start over from scratch, do a bunch of political maneuvering (advisor appeasement) and write another thesis. For what? More research freedom? My MD + MS + prior work will work fine for the amount and level of research I want to conduct in my career. The only (and admittedly bad) benefits would be ego appeasement, a 3-year vacation from med school, and "selling out."...Either way right now at least the MDPhD *feels* like a waste of time even for someone like me who has already some moderate success in research...In fact, all it gives me is all bunch of B.S. procedure like qualifier and committee meetings...
I don't know if going to the European model will work - as is, US PhDs are the envy of the world. Bio PhDs are not the only ones that can take 4+ years - engineering and science PhDs can take a long time too....Top grads go to third rate schools to become faculties that will never get anything significant done. It's really depressing. NIH needs to restructure and standardize PhD program. How about the Cold Spring Harbor Model? 4 yrs and you are OUT. How about the European model?
(4) if you are interested in doing basic research but don't hate patients, do not ever do a PhD only. Important. (in Chinese accent): No Job for PhD. If you do a PhD only, do it in math and physics. Don't do it in bio. If you do it in bio, do not go to anywhere but the big five: Harvard/MIT/MGH complex, UCSF/Berkeley/Stanford complex, Rockefeller, Caltech and (somewhere else depending on your specialty, i.e. neuroscience maybe UCSD and Columbia, etc). Anything coming from a less well regarded PhD gets you NOWHERE. and by NOWHERE i mean NOWHERE. Academia is this pretentious little pothole, if you go to StateU USA you won't even get to be invited to all the important conferences. NOBODY TALKS TO YOU, literally. Give up now. Don't be an outcast. You got into science to stop being the only nerd who get bullied. Don't let it happen to you again!
You seem like you're in quite a bad mood, but many good, and well-respected researchers get their PhDs from less reknowned schools and do fine. The woman I'm rotating with this summer got both her BS and PhD at Penn State, but also happened to do some very good research. She now has two R01s, a full Professorship, and a good publishing record.
It's obviously easier if you start off from one of the big established PhD programs, just based on who you know, but I think it'd be misleading to be so absolute about it.
This is a good point. I concede to it.
However, nobody has a crystal ball and can foretell the future. Either way right now at least the MDPhD *feels* like a waste of time even for someone like me who has already some moderate success in research. I JUST DON'T FEEL as if the PhD is getting me anything that I can't get from straight Postdoc. In fact, all it gives me is all bunch of B.S. procedure like qualifier and committee meetings.
Granted, what I'm doing now requires some mathematical skills and a fair bit of background knowledge, but it's not something that can't be picked up quickly on the fly (if you are no good at math to begin with, you'll never do the kind of research i'm doing ANYWAY). And in the molecular world that is even truer, you follow protocols and get results. As a postdoc you are more focused and work harder and get paid more.
My problem isn't with the MD. I think MD is great training. PhD is CRAP. The American educational system use the PhD program to get cheap labor from abroad, knowing that there will be NOT ENOUGH jobs once they get out. Top grads go to third rate schools to become faculties that will never get anything significant done. It's really depressing. NIH needs to restructure and standardize PhD program. How about the Cold Spring Harbor Model? 4 yrs and you are OUT. How about the European model?
And let me tell you, once you are ready to file an R01, it is NOT the PhD that gives you an edge. It's the MD degree. How much HARDER the PhDs have to work? How unfathomably horrific their odds are? Years and years of tedium and low wage and politics? Why do you think PhD programs, even at top places, are comparably easier to get into? Why do you think the best American students go to med school, law school and b-school?
Here are some GOOD reasons for getting the PhD. I'm not being sarcastic, just cynical. I have begun a strict no B.S. policy for a while. And for the most part I think my opinion is actually, shockingly, non-controversial on the "inside", if you know what I mean.
(1) if you are dumb, the PhD makes you learn how to do research like a kindergartener. Usually taught by some slave-driving postdoc who's gunning for his first Nature paper. Even though thankfully this is not happening to me, it happens to many. Ask yourself if you are dumb, seriously, if you go into a biosci phd program. If the answer is NO, go with MD+postdoc.
(2) lots of time off. lots of pot. lots of liquor. lots of sex with gf/bf/escapades. lots of "gosh darn my experiments aren't working out i'm going to Cambodia to ride a crack boat for three months."
(3) (a little bit) of money
(4) great residency placement without lots of work during 3rd year or step i. very useful. do a crap PhD, have some time traveling and having fun in your 20s and a great lifestyle later with the likes of derm, rads, optho and dare I say ENT. This is officially called "selling out," and I do still despise those folks out there (but really when like 30% of your class sells out, what can you say?! And let me tell you it's not just my school. In fact, the worse the school is, it more frequently this phenomenon occurs. We should just eliminate all MDPhD programs below the rank of 50 at this point. All the non-NIH funed MDPhD programs? They shouldn't be allowed to exist.), some really very smart people who would have been great researchers. But then again that's just my Jewish/Asian guilt talking. Says more about me than about them.
Here are some contraindications for MD/PhD...and yes it is a drug. I've heard many a driven Asian/Jewish/immigrant kids at the tender age of 16 telling me that they want to do MDPhD, just cause it's like, oh my god, so many doctorates:
(1) if you are over the age of 25 at the time of matriculation. Strongly contraindicated.
(2) if you were wavering between MDPhD and MD only, go with the MD only.
(3) if you are not interested in doing basic research (i.e. only interested in translational/disease oriented research), go with the MD only.
(4) if you are interested in doing basic research but don't hate patients, do not ever do a PhD only. Important. (in Chinese accent): No Job for PhD. If you do a PhD only, do it in math and physics. Don't do it in bio. If you do it in bio, do not go to anywhere but the big five: Harvard/MIT/MGH complex, UCSF/Berkeley/Stanford complex, Rockefeller, Caltech and (somewhere else depending on your specialty, i.e. neuroscience maybe UCSD and Columbia, etc). Anything coming from a less well regarded PhD gets you NOWHERE. and by NOWHERE i mean NOWHERE. Academia is this pretentious little pothole, if you go to StateU USA you won't even get to be invited to all the important conferences. NOBODY TALKS TO YOU, literally. Give up now. Don't be an outcast. You got into science to stop being the only nerd who get bullied. Don't let it happen to you again!
(5) if you have lots of money. (on the other hand, you might want to do a PhD just to waste some time.)
Honestly, it really makes you think sometimes. Why is it that every MD/MDPhD researcher you meet is smarter, cooler, has a bigger picture and every PhD researcher you meet is some socially incompetent vainglorious lunatic? (doesn't count the real PhDs like evolutionary bio, physics, math, chem, engineering etc. A string theorist can be as interesting to talk to.) Bio PhD programs are labor camps! They are toxic!
This ends my diatribe for the day, back to qualifer 😛
P.S. O god, Peter Agre and Rod McKinnon are both MDs?!
where are the CHEMISTRY PhDs? huh? where??? More evidence that PhD is crap. MD is gold
for more information on why MDPhD is a waste of time
http://www.columbia.edu/~xsl2101/interests.htm#mdphd
for more information on why MDPhD is a waste of time
http://www.columbia.edu/~xsl2101/interests.htm#mdphd
Slu, we must have been separated at birth dog (although, I'm neither Asian nor Jewish).......I feel your pain, dear God I feel your pain. I'm 4.5 years into this and I just finished my quals this past summer. I have to say, it seems like all of the older/about to graduate med school-MD/PhDers look back and say "Wow, that was totally worth it.....I'd do it again in a heart beat!", while those of us in the midst of PhD hell are much more cynical. As of today, I feel the exact same way that Sluox does......from this side of the mirror, the outlook is gloomy at best. Dude, hang in there.......something's gotta give eventually......or at least that's what I tell myself in order to get out of bed in the morning.
Dude, that's freakin' sad. You're only 4.5 years in and you're already burned out? You haven't even STARTED your thesis work probably. It will get 10x more frustrating. No way do you finish.
/save the cynicism for 6th/7th year- that's when it will come in the most handy.
1. Actually, I have a SIGNIFICANT amount of my thesis work done.......I'm finishing up grad school in another year or so.
2. Once you're actually accepted to med school (or even dare I say an MSTP) you'll see what we mean little grasshopper.
3. By 6th or 7th year I assume you mean 3rd/4th year of med school......dude, med school is cake. Again, you'll see what I mean when you get there.
Dude, that's freakin' sad. You're only 4.5 years in and you're already burned out? You haven't even STARTED your thesis work probably. It will get 10x more frustrating. No way do you finish.
/save the cynicism for 6th/7th year- that's when it will come in the most handy.
Uhh... I'm a 7th year MSTP- be careful who you decide to talk down to. I'm in my 5th year of the PhD, and I am finishing up now, and hopefully returning to clinics in February.
If you are 4.5 years in, that means you are in your 3rd year of the PhD, and saying that you know when you will be done means 1) you have a BS PhD or 2) you have had everything go right, so what could you possibly be so burned out about?
Callow and churlish despite your years. Congrats.
1. Actually, I have a SIGNIFICANT amount of my thesis work done.......I'm finishing up grad school in another year or so.
2. Once you're actually accepted to med school (or even dare I say an MSTP) you'll see what we mean little grasshopper.
3. By 6th or 7th year I assume you mean 3rd/4th year of med school......dude, med school is cake. Again, you'll see what I mean when you get there.
I think you guys need to kiss and make up!Uhh... I'm a 7th year MSTP- be careful who you decide to talk down to. I'm in my 5th year of the PhD, and I am finishing up now, and hopefully returning to clinics in February.
If you are 4.5 years in, that means you are in your 3rd year of the PhD, and saying that you know when you will be done means 1) you have a BS PhD or 2) you have had everything go right, so what could you possibly be so burned out about?
I think you guys need to kiss and make up!![]()
It's funny seeing posters jump to conclusions - "you must not know the agony I went through" - heaven forbid somebody empathizes with you! Looks like all those hours in med student empathy classes were wasted! 🙄
After almost 20 years in/around academia/medical schools, this sums the situation up quite nicely!👍Hmm, based on that link:
"1) MD pathway is the most expensive, demands the most self-discipline, but also the fastest.
2) MD/PhD pathway is probably the safest pathway and probably where the students have the most fun having BOTH MD and PhD experiences
3) PhD pathway is the most risky.".
IMHO, the most logical and obvious career path for an MD/PhD is pathology. Pretty easy to do your translationla medicine thing w/o sacrificing clinical or research time.The big pathways seem to be:
*An internal medicine/biology-based MD/PhD
*A math-physics-engineering-based MD/PhD
*A surgical residency-based MD/PhD.
As a person in her 40's, I don't think it makes much sense to make ANY career decision based age with the exception of a career in neurosurgery. I think it's reasonable to assume that most MD/PhD folks tend to attract people with similar ambition, so assuming you don't marry a person with 10 kids, establishing financial security will be no problem if you're level headed.Consider each step, the end goal, the quality of life through it all, the time each step takes/how old you will be, and talk to people who have done it/are in it.