I too love the general field of medicine and currently have experience in both vet med and human med.
Two years ago I was pre-med, and I had a great experience on a medical service trip down to Costa Rica, but I was not doing well on the practice mcats. I decided to switch directions to vet med knowing that I enjoyed working at a vet clinic in high school, lifestyle reasons, insurance bs, and also the poor mcat results.
Within that last year, I was able to gain more vet med experience totaling ~1200 hrs but much of the work felt like I was just trying to get hours because I knew how big of a deal experience is for vet school admissions. I did enjoy some parts of volunteering and I do love animals. I applied to veterinary schools this past September, and by November, I had convinced myself that I was not going to get in because everyone says how hard it is. Plus, I began an animal nutrition course online and I really didn't like learning about what to feed a chicken/cow/.. and why. I am a small animal person and really don't find learning about farm animals exciting in the least.
In December, I had decided to go back to the medical field- MD or perhaps Physician's Assistant because I like primary care and the lifestyle is more manageable, although you must give up your autonomy... To fill up the supposed gap in application time, I started this semester to take public health classes and applied to a public health school- I really like my environmental health sciences class 😳
January: I was accepted so far to 3 veterinary schools + 2 interviews in February, and I was shocked. Now I am so very confused and do not know what to do because I like/dislike aspects about both fields and each day the direction I think I'm leaning changes. I feel like I convinced myself out of vet med just based on the fear of rejection from veterinary schools.
Please help me! I do not know what to do and must come up with a decision by April! 😱
(Other general characteristics about me that may help anyone who feels kind enough to submit an opinion regarding my sticky situation:
I am a laid back person, and I feel like I definitely fit in better with the vet kids crowd than the med kids. I am passionate about the science of how things work (got a BSE in biomedical engineering) but am not a fan of research because I love/need human interaction in my daily life. I simply love helping medically all beings, but cannot for the life of me decide which species I like helping more. Each field has issues: grumpy/stinky people <> mean/smelly dogs...
Also, while growing up, I never really "dreamed" of being this or that unlike other kids. I was very serious about classical music for a while and I liked biology and learning how things worked in the body. I just enjoyed my BSE degree and apparently didn't think/plan hard enough about my future options and now I'm paying for it. I honestly think I could do either vet med or human med and be pretty happy with it, but I can't figure out which one makes me happier- I've had good and bad experiences with both )
hey greenie53,
i had a somewhat similar experience. i seriously pursued classical music at a conservatory for a while. i never specifically planned for a future in anything, i just practiced a lot and took things as the came. then, one day i starting taking classes outside of the music school, and somhow did the pre-reqs for pre-med. my dad discouraged me from being a MD (being a doctor today can be messed up, depending on where you work, with insurance issues, double-booking of patients, malpractice, longgggg hours, etc). he said i would be happier as a DVM. so i got some hours for my vet application, applied, and got in. it feels weird, once this isn't the realization of some childhood dream like many of the pre-vets i know. anyhow, at first i wasn't 100% sure what i wanted to do, but i just picked an option, stuck with it, and now it's growing on me more and more everyday. i think if you love animals and are good at science, a vet is better than a doctor. they make less, but i think you will have a better quality of life.
here's a link to a new york times article from last month called "the falling down professions."
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/06/fashion/06professions.html?pagewanted=2
and here are some highlights:
"As of 2006, nearly 60 percent of doctors polled by the American College of Physician Executives said they had considered getting out of medicine because of low morale, and nearly 70 percent knew someone who already had."
"Doctors face similar pressure. Complaints about managed care crimping doctors income and authority over medical decisions are nothing new, but the problems are only getting worse, several doctors said."
"Increasing workloads and paperwork might be tolerable if the old feeling of authority were still the same, doctors said. But patients who once might have revered them for their knowledge and skill often arrive at the office armed with a sense of personal expertise, gleaned from a few hours on
www.WebMD.com, doctors said, not to mention a disdain for the medical system in general.
If the topic comes up in cocktail party talk, youll hear nightmare stories from people as theyve gone through the system they gave me the wrong pill, et cetera, said Dr. Gregg Broffman, 57, a former pediatrician who is now a medical director of a primary care group in Buffalo. In terms of my own self-esteem, it feels like a personal attack.