- Joined
- Aug 8, 2014
- Messages
- 3,432
- Reaction score
- 2,188
If someone works hard during undergrad and has a good personality, it's not *that* hard to get into medical school.
Its still pretty hard lol
If someone works hard during undergrad and has a good personality, it's not *that* hard to get into medical school.
How does you having it harder mean they owe you anything? Times were different and things change. They don't owe you the exact world they were educated in lol.We owe them $300k and a resume's worth of accolades that weren't necessary for premeds 50-60 years ago and they don't owe us a couple more spots in their school? Oh okay
I mean, it's only fitting for this threadlol the trolling is real right now
If he dropped out as an M1 though doesn't that indicate problems with the academics more than being unfulfilled by patients?I agree with both of these points. At the end of the day, if you're honest with yourself, do some genuine reflection about whether medicine is the right career for you, and get as much information as possible given your stage, you will likely be fine. People run into problems when they, for lack of a better phrase, "don't trust their gut" or don't engage in meaningful research into both medicine as a career as well as other possible alternatives. Theoretically the admissions process gets at this process by de facto requiring things like clinical experience, volunteering, etc., but people that approach the admissions process only has a box-checking exercise without reflecting on their experiences or focusing solely on the end-game, for example, are at risk of being unfulfilled by medicine.
To give an example (and hopefully without putting words in his mouth), I think @circulus vitios is a prime example of this. He often talked about medicine as strictly a job that offers a fantastic salary with minimal work beyond getting into the training pathway, yet he dropped out of med school and went on to other things before finishing his first year. I don't mean that in a pejorative sense - I'm not ****ting on him for what he did by any means. But it serves as an example of what can happen if you don't engage in serious reflection on what the process entails, what your overall goals are, and if you think the intrinsic work of being a medical student/resident/doctor will be interesting or fulfilling enough to you to propel you through the arduous training process. If he still checks SDN, maybe he'll pop into this thread and give a more thorough perspective of his experience.
IT IS NEVEE TOO LATE! POKEMON = II, per se
You want that, don't you?
I think that's because the academics are hard for the overwhelming majority of peopleIts still pretty hard lol
LIESah alas, I dont know if pokemon status will give me a II. MD schools dont like pokemon from what I hear.
I think that's because the academics are hard for the overwhelming majority of people
Extra residencies fill with IMGs, which end up being just as good as US trained doctors. Adding more residency slots increases the actual number of doctors in practice. Adding more medical school seats just changes the number of US grads that fill those seats. Soon, however, there will no longer be an excess, and we will have more US graduates than residency positions, in which case US graduates will have nowhere to train.Don't like 90% of applicants get into a residency? Just going off of what other people have told me/what I've seen.
EDIT: Just checked, 97% of applicants find a residency.
Extra residencies fill with IMGs, which end up being just as good as US trained doctors. Adding more residency slots increases the actual number of doctors in practice. Adding more medical school seats just changes the number of US grads that fill those seats. Soon, however, there will no longer be an excess, and we will have more US graduates than residency positions, in which case US graduates will have nowhere to train.
If he dropped out as an M1 though doesn't that indicate problems with the academics more than being unfulfilled by patients?
Dermviser's old signature comes to mind, the quote talking about how everyone comes in ready to change the world and sacrifice, and then ends up resenting patients and praying for the lifestyle specialty match
?a job that pays as well as something that just took a Bachelor's
Economy absolutely effects it....I did the mathWhy is no one bringing up the relationship between the economy and number of medical school applicants? I forget who posted it yesterday, but just ten years ago, there were 8000 more residencies available than fourth year medical students. Can't we see this direct increase in "desire" for medicine a result of the recession? We have put more value in job security, taking us away from pursuing a PhD or a job in business?
Say what you want, but I doubt this interest in medicine is only going to increase as the years go on, as the economy gets better, less will want to put the ten years in to get a job that pays as well as something that just took a Bachelor's
EDIT: *embracing for the naive SDNers who say they would have pursued a career in medicine no matter what*
Why is no one bringing up the relationship between the economy and number of medical school applicants? I forget who posted it yesterday, but just ten years ago, there were 8000 more residencies available than fourth year medical students. Can't we see this direct increase in "desire" for medicine a result of the recession? We have put more value in job security, taking us away from pursuing a PhD or a job in business?
Say what you want, but I doubt this interest in medicine is only going to increase as the years go on, as the economy gets better, less will want to put the ten years in to get a job that pays as well as something that just took a Bachelor's
EDIT: *embracing for the naive SDNers who say they would have pursued a career in medicine no matter what*
It's likely DOs will face some of the brunt of a shortage. But, interestingly, DOs seem to be doing better in the match, while MD match rates are dropping a bit over the past two years as DO and IMG numbers have increased. There's enough solid non-USMD candidates that bottom of the barrel MDs no longer are getting pity positions much of the time. Will the outlook be great for DOs? Probably not. But will it be as bad as current Carib grads? Also probably not.Well if what you say is 100 percent how its going to go down, then DO students will be in the same spot as IMGs and FMGs are right now. That is assuming with the merger coming up of course.
I imagine someone in business in a good economy could have reached the six figure range within ten years of their undergrad, similar pay to a Pediatrician and Family doctor...
Why is no one bringing up the relationship between the economy and number of medical school applicants? I forget who posted it yesterday, but just ten years ago, there were 8000 more residencies available than fourth year medical students. Can't we see this direct increase in "desire" for medicine a result of the recession? We have put more value in job security, taking us away from pursuing a PhD or a job in business?
Say what you want, but I doubt this interest in medicine is only going to increase as the years go on, as the economy gets better, less will want to put the ten years in to get a job that pays as well as something that just took a Bachelor's
EDIT: *embracing for the naive SDNers who say they would have pursued a career in medicine no matter what*
But w/o the stability of medicine.I imagine someone in business in a good economy could have reached the six figure range within ten years of their undergrad, similar pay to a Pediatrician and Family doctor...
hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
The only answer is to pay them more. They will not move there en masse without itWhile we're here, any thoughts on how we're going to tackle the doctor distribution problem? I.e getting Psychs, Ob/Gyns and FMs into rural and poorer urban settings?
I've felt for a while that the way we select for future medical students (academics + testing + research + altruism) is also unwittingly selecting for "academics + testing + research + altruism" personality types or, in other words, people who want to live in a metropolitan area and specialize. I know for a fact that not everyone wants that type of lifestyle but successful pre-meds seem to fall into that mold pretty easily. Idk, I'm just talking off the top of my head from what I've observed. Thoughts?
The only answer is to pay them more. They will not move there en masse without it
Open up medical schools in these rural areas. TCMC, UC Riverside, Temple's rural campus. I'm sure wherever you go to medical school there is a good chance a portion of your class stays local in residency and practiceWhile we're here, any thoughts on how we're going to tackle the doctor distribution problem? I.e getting Psychs, Ob/Gyns and FMs into rural and poorer urban settings?
I've felt for a while that the way we select for future medical students (academics + testing + research + altruism) is also unwittingly selecting for "academics + testing + research + altruism" personality types or, in other words, people who want to live in a metropolitan area and specialize. I know for a fact that not everyone wants that type of lifestyle but successful pre-meds seem to fall into that mold pretty easily. Idk, I'm just talking off the top of my head from what I've observed. Thoughts?
Open up medical schools in these rural areas. TCMC, UC Riverside, Temple's rural campus. I'm sure wherever you go to medical school there is a good chance a portion of your class stays local in residency and practice
They leave in large numbers once the loan payments stop...and the aca makes running a single doc family practice harder unless you ditch the whole system and go direct cash primary careWell NHSC scholarships and loan repayment is a thing so there are financial incentives in place to practicing in such a location. Furthermore, are doctors in those areas not more likely to be able to open up private practices and not be associated with the big hospital systems many docs seem to be complaining about? Technically one should be making far more money working as the only Ortho surgeon within 100 miles than one would be as a junior ortho just starting out in LA. I'm not sure financial incentives are the only thing moving people in that direction because at schools where the debt load is smaller (texas schools) a lot more people seem to go into primary care than at more expensive schools. In some sense, negative money seems to influence people more than positive money even though, technically, there is no real difference between the two in spreadsheet terms.
While we're here, any thoughts on how we're going to tackle the doctor distribution problem? I.e getting Psychs, Ob/Gyns and FMs into rural and poorer urban settings?
I've felt for a while that the way we select for future medical students (academics + testing + research + altruism) is also unwittingly selecting for "academics + testing + research + altruism" personality types or, in other words, people who want to live in a metropolitan area and specialize. I know for a fact that not everyone wants that type of lifestyle but successful pre-meds seem to fall into that mold pretty easily. Idk, I'm just talking off the top of my head from what I've observed. Thoughts?
They leave in large numbers once the loan payments stop...and the aca makes running a single doc family practice harder unless you ditch the whole system and go direct cash primary care
Considering that favorable tort reform has been shown to increase physician retention in my home state of Texas I would agree with that assessment. Adequate legal and financial protection for the physician is probably more important to geographic retention than the actual size of the physician's paycheck.I've heard that there is a massive shortage of OBs in West Virginia because of particularly poor malpractice laws (i.e., they get the **** sued out of them, more than anywhere else). Don't know how true this is, though.
I agree with both of these points. At the end of the day, if you're honest with yourself, do some genuine reflection about whether medicine is the right career for you, and get as much information as possible given your stage, you will likely be fine. People run into problems when they, for lack of a better phrase, "don't trust their gut" or don't engage in meaningful research into both medicine as a career as well as other possible alternatives. Theoretically the admissions process gets at this process by de facto requiring things like clinical experience, volunteering, etc., but people that approach the admissions process only has a box-checking exercise without reflecting on their experiences or focusing solely on the end-game, for example, are at risk of being unfulfilled by medicine.
To give an example (and hopefully without putting words in his mouth), I think @circulus vitios is a prime example of this. He often talked about medicine as strictly a job that offers a fantastic salary with minimal work beyond getting into the training pathway, yet he dropped out of med school and went on to other things before finishing his first year. I don't mean that in a pejorative sense - I'm not ****ting on him for what he did by any means. But it serves as an example of what can happen if you don't engage in serious reflection on what the process entails, what your overall goals are, and if you think the intrinsic work of being a medical student/resident/doctor will be interesting or fulfilling enough to you to propel you through the arduous training process. If he still checks SDN, maybe he'll pop into this thread and give a more thorough perspective of his experience.
The aca makes it harder because of all the extra service coordination and tracking docs are being pushed to do, they simply can't do it as a single doc shop in most cases.How so to the bolded?
According to NHSC retention data 0-10 years after the commitment is up 82% of providers remain in an under-served location and after 10 years 55% stay in that same setting. (numbers from 2012: http://nhsc.hrsa.gov/currentmembers/membersites/retainproviders/retentionbrief.pdf. Long-term retention could be better but I feel those numbers are pretty robust in that one could confidently say that NHSC is selecting under the proper criteria for choosing primary care providers. Shouldn't medical schools adopt a screening process that more closely resembles the NHSC's?
@steelersfan1243 you actually think the majority of people who start small business are six figures ten years later? Many are lucky to still be in business
You're wrong on a few key points here...
Second, why would you expect "that the "genetic" component is randomly distributed throughout the population"? There's a considerable component of intelligence that is heritable and also a significant correlation between intelligence and educational attainment and future economic success. While we might like to think that all are created equal, that really isn't true and there's a significant skew.
.
The aca makes it harder because of all the extra service coordination and tracking docs are being pushed to do, they simply can't do it as a single doc shop in most cases.
The job of the nhsc is to get doctors to those places, it is not the job of medical schools to get doctors to those places. Medical school's role is to train the most competant doctor's possible before they go to residency. Where I end up living is none of my school's concern (note: I actually want to be rural)
And those locations need to pay more...some areas are attractive when you add up the variables (pay/weather/economy/schools/tax structure/expense) and some just aren't.Well medical schools have professed missions to meet the healthcare needs of the country and to join a medical school is to align yourself with that mission, is it not? And the geographic maldistribution of physicians is a healthcare problem that should be addressed. If not be medical schools then by who? The NHSC can only do so much and even then their reach is limited. There are many locations that may be in dire need of physicians - especially specialists - that do not meet the NHSCs definition of "under served".
And those locations need to pay more...some areas are attractive when you add up the variables (pay/weather/economy/schools/tax structure/expense) and some just aren't.
The only one that can be changed with a pen is the pay. You want medicaid patients in a county with no doctor to have a doctor? Offer a cash premium on their rvu...or the county can write a check to the doctor. But this constant handwringing about why we can't emotionally coerce docs to move places they don't want to is silly. People will follow the money
Off topic question: could you explain how the difference in patient care affects choosing a specialty? Are residents often surprised by what working in their specialty is like?IMO getting into medical school doesn't really demonstrate any of that. It's less than half of the minimal length of the overall training pathway. I'm not really sure you can demonstrate an "unwavering commitment" to anything at that stage.
It does weed out people that aren't serious about getting into medical school, but you still aren't likely to know first-hand what patient care is all about until midway through medical school. Even then it's not quite the same.
I'm not talking about emotional coercion. Docs should go wherever they please. I'm talking about selecting for the right type of person most likely to actually meet the professed mission of certain medical schools. I don't think pay is enough. Docs are moving to urban centers more often and people are vying for the most competitive, often academic positions in these urban centers. This entails more competition and often less compensation. I think the problem is more complicated than just what job pays the most. I really do think it ultimately has to do with the type of people being selected to be physicians.
Oh, but if you choose people who will "fit in" with regard to race, ethnicity, religion, customs, and taste in music, you are going to be accused of being racist and not choosing "the best" for medicine. The "best" for some areas that many consider "undesirable" is someone who would not be viewed as an outsider in that area. That does limit things for some minorities and could make it easier for others. Discuss.
When I say go into business I mean along the lines of an accountant, consultant, or investment bank. Yes, I believe with a good economy, in ten years these people could and depending on their drive, should expect a six figure salary@steelersfan1243 you actually think the majority of people who start small business are six figures ten years later? Many are lucky to still be in business
10 years of 65-80k vs the remaining 35 years of low 100s instead 350-400+ if you go for the high paying specialties...you do the math. With the average debt as an MD grad, you more than make up the difference as something like an ortho. If certainty of a high income throughout second half of your life is your primary motivation it's the clear winnerGrads from engineering schools are routinely getting 65-80K from companies right out of the gate. What do you think they might be making in 10 years? Or if some of you guys went straight to a biotech or pharmaceutical? How much do you think you might be making in 8-10 years?
There's a mix of overestimated salary and overestimated security/certainty here. Accountants aren't rolling in cash. Going after investment baking and even consulting broadly defined is far from the certainty you're looking at with an MD. Not to mention that if you're the type of person motivated by money, there are specialties that will more than make up the initial difference at the ten-years-in markWhen I say go into business I mean along the lines of an accountant, consultant, or investment bank. Yes, I believe with a good economy, in ten years these people could and depending on their drive, should expect a six figure salary
Oh, but if you choose people who will "fit in" with regard to race, ethnicity, religion, customs, and taste in music, you are going to be accused of being racist and not choosing "the best" for medicine. The "best" for some areas that many consider "undesirable" is someone who would not be viewed as an outsider in that area. That does limit things for some minorities and could make it easier for others. Discuss.
And those locations need to pay more...some areas are attractive when you add up the variables (pay/weather/economy/schools/tax structure/expense) and some just aren't.
The only one that can be changed with a pen is the pay. You want medicaid patients in a county with no doctor to have a doctor? Offer a cash premium on their rvu...or the county can write a check to the doctor. But this constant handwringing about why we can't emotionally coerce docs to move places they don't want to is silly. People will follow the money
Loan forgiveness is in no way equivalent to a competitive salary. They need to actually be paid more, with actual cash, not expiring fringe benefits.Well NHSC scholarships and loan repayment is a thing so there are financial incentives in place to practicing in such a location. Furthermore, are doctors in those areas not more likely to be able to open up private practices and not be associated with the big hospital systems many docs seem to be complaining about? Technically one should be making far more money working as the only Ortho surgeon within 100 miles than one would be as a junior ortho just starting out in LA. I'm not sure financial incentives are the only thing moving people in that direction because at schools where the debt load is smaller (texas schools) a lot more people seem to go into primary care than at more expensive schools. In some sense, negative money seems to influence people more than positive money even though, technically, there is no real difference between the two in spreadsheet terms.
Where you go to medical school has little effect on where you practice. Where you go to residency, has, however, been shown to correlate well with eventual practice location. The solution is more rural residencies, not more rural schools.Open up medical schools in these rural areas. TCMC, UC Riverside, Temple's rural campus. I'm sure wherever you go to medical school there is a good chance a portion of your class stays local in residency and practice