Don't PhDs get a stipend and their education tuition free? Or is that just MD/PhDs in MSTP programs?
In fact, most if not all PhD (STEM) programs waive tuition and pay a stipend.
I tossed that fact at this person, and told them that the overwhelming majority of medical students must essentially live beyond their means in order to earn an MD, by borrowing so much money to be able to afford (i) the high tuition and (ii) not to work for even a marginal income for 4 years. Their response was "Well I've been supporting myself since I was 16 years old, so I'm used to living beyond my means." I mean, I don't even know how to respond to that. It's an extreme example that doesn't represent the majority of people, and it doesn't change the argument at hand anyway.
So I'm guessing these PhDs are willing to see and workup patients? Let them put their money where their mouths are. Time for them to use their fingers to do rectals instead of pipetting.
This is where the argument about developing vaccines, antibiotics, new treatments etc. came in. They were insulted that I did not regard them as a health professional, or as they so insistently put it 'medically related professional', for which the latter, if you ask me, is just an arbitrary self-distinction. Not once did I devalue the extraordinary contributions that scientists make to society, but the basic scientists have a clearly defined role that does not include the provision of healthcare. Also, not every scientist that gets churned out of a PhD program is the next Jonas Salk or James Watson. You don't need to be a health professional to have an impact on health, but if you're going to bill yourself as a health professional, you better damn well have been vomited by a patient or been chewed out for making a mistake in a life-and-death situation, or any number of the other things that are not so glorious about medicine that would never happen to you in a laboratory setting. The closest I have come to any of this in a lab is being pooped on by a mouse - and when that happened, I just flicked the poop off the latex glove, and continued with the experiment. Also, I spent a weekend in the lab once running manual immunohistochemistry on about 200 slides, and when I was finished I forgot to put a set of 20 in the cold-box. I got chewed out for this, and that portion of the experiment had to be redone, which obviously is not ideal in terms of efficiency - but it wasn't a life and death situation, nobody's safety was threatened (well except for maybe mine when my boss looked like he was about ready to strangle me) and noone was hurt or sued over it.
Not to shock you, but you're not guaranteed a job (a residency program position) after medical school either.
Wow, you truly are delusional, but please keep expounding.
Once again, when I am saying 'guaranteed a job' this is by comparison. When I graduated (from a USNWR top 40 university) I had a very difficult time finding a job. It took me ~8 months or so before I was able to secure a full-time paying position related to my field of study from college. This is probably true for the majority of college graduates in the U.S. The same is not true for the overwhelming majority (93% match rate) of US medical graduates. So, by comparison to say, an MBA program, Law School, or in the case of this debate MD vs. PhD, it is relatively guaranteed. I'm not suggesting you can just show up to medical school, fart out 'passes' for all your courses and clerkships, pull a 198 for USMLE and expect for all the residency dogs to be barking up your ERAS tree - but if 93% of seniors match, then I interperet that as a '93% guarantee'. I'm sorry if I had the numbers wrong the first time around. According to other threads on SDN, I am not inaccurate in suggesting that unmatched seniors are either uncompetitive for the specialty they are trying to match into or that they are overconfident in preparing their ROL.
More on topic, it's not the debt or the training that sets us apart but the simple fact that we are sacrificing so much to serve other people. Job market, debt burden, etc. are all important but that's not what makes us different. Everyone wants to be us though as you can see how they're all trying to emulate us with the white coat and the title of doctor. I mean Columbia P&S had the first white coat ceremony in 1993 and it took only 2 years for pharmacy schools to start doing it too. Now everyone and their mothers has a white coat ceremony since they're all unique little flowers.
I really wanted to bring this up, but feared it would invite the whole '
Do you think PhD students don't sacrifice their livelihood and well-being through grad school and their post-doctoral fellowships? That we don't pull all-nighters and that we don't forgo a high salary right out of college so we can instead earn near-slave wage stipends while we lose sleep and work to solve problems noone else has yet tried to answer?'
By the way, I tried to defuse the whole situation by explaining that MD's do not yet have a narrowly defined skill set (that comes in residency) and so there is essentially a supply of 19,000 MD's each year that are basically 'templates' for specialization of their skills, where as a PhD student who has worked in a Microbiology lab for 5 years will be received in the job market as a 'classically trained microbiologist' - it is doubtful that an investigator who focuses on the physiology of high altitude environments will be so keen to hire someone who doesn't have extensive training in organismal biology. Likewise, there may be only 10 investigators in the country that are trying to answer a given question through their research, and there may only be 4 or 6 newly-minted PhD's with the skill set necessary or prior experience in a related laboratory to contribute meaningfully in those 10 labs that are hiring. Multiply this by about 20,000 and you get the logistical nightmare of trying to set up a system that 'matches' PhD students to post-doctoral fellowships.
The response I was given: "
Yes, and because our skills are so specialized by the time we graduate, that is all the more reason why there should be a match system in place for us. There is not as great a supply of PhD students are there are doctors, and we should receive assistance in securing employment"