- Joined
- Mar 16, 2015
- Messages
- 7
- Reaction score
- 1
I've been accepted into an MD/PhD program and also have offers from very well-known software companies whose products you have likely used today. I have very little time to decide.
I've spoken to over a dozen people who have gone through the MD/PhD program, and the majority told me to go to industry and forget the whole physician-scientist thing. Like any good engineer, I'm interested in helping humanity. Innovating in medicine seems like a way to do that. Medicine is 30 years behind technology, and something huge is going to happen. Going through the pre-med process was a huge sidetrack, took a ton of time, and detracted from my research. So, I feel like I could end up making a big mistake by turning down the opportunity.
Software companies in the Valley are starting to break into medicine and have realized their potential revolutionary role. I am worried that if I go with the MD/PhD route, silicon valley will have overtaken innovation in medicine by the time I get out (10-15 years out), making the MD/PhD superfluous. For example, google "apple watch medicine" and you will have an idea of what I'm getting at. Also, I'm concerned that I would be committing financial suicide. Good engineering superstars are now earning bigger salaries than physicians (e.g.: glassdoor.com "senior software engineer" vs. "radiologist"). Extrapolating into the future, I believe physician wages will continue to decline (and that the protectionist medical profession is on its way out) and engineering wages will continue to rise under market forces. Factoring in 12-15 years training time, I could be retired instead of just graduating from a residency. Yes, money is very important to me. I don't care what you say -- if you are on this forum, money probably matters so lying to yourself or to me won't help.
I'm posting this in the very off chance someone is in a similar position, since I know a lot of engineers would have a similar dilemma/mindset. Would I be crazy to turn down an MD/PhD offer?
I've spoken to over a dozen people who have gone through the MD/PhD program, and the majority told me to go to industry and forget the whole physician-scientist thing. Like any good engineer, I'm interested in helping humanity. Innovating in medicine seems like a way to do that. Medicine is 30 years behind technology, and something huge is going to happen. Going through the pre-med process was a huge sidetrack, took a ton of time, and detracted from my research. So, I feel like I could end up making a big mistake by turning down the opportunity.
Software companies in the Valley are starting to break into medicine and have realized their potential revolutionary role. I am worried that if I go with the MD/PhD route, silicon valley will have overtaken innovation in medicine by the time I get out (10-15 years out), making the MD/PhD superfluous. For example, google "apple watch medicine" and you will have an idea of what I'm getting at. Also, I'm concerned that I would be committing financial suicide. Good engineering superstars are now earning bigger salaries than physicians (e.g.: glassdoor.com "senior software engineer" vs. "radiologist"). Extrapolating into the future, I believe physician wages will continue to decline (and that the protectionist medical profession is on its way out) and engineering wages will continue to rise under market forces. Factoring in 12-15 years training time, I could be retired instead of just graduating from a residency. Yes, money is very important to me. I don't care what you say -- if you are on this forum, money probably matters so lying to yourself or to me won't help.
I'm posting this in the very off chance someone is in a similar position, since I know a lot of engineers would have a similar dilemma/mindset. Would I be crazy to turn down an MD/PhD offer?