ok, i'm usually a lurker on this site. i think my last post was...i can't remember.
anyway, this is an interesting thread and i just can't resist the urge to post. so here's my take on the whole damn thing.
i can't help but feel like what's been lost in this thread, and in the countless other similar threads that have gone up over the years, AND the dozens of conversations i've had about this subject over the years is context. (was that a run-on sentence?) anyway, the context here is the study of MEDICINE and THE BASIC SCIENCES.
too often, i hear PAs, NPs, RNs, PTs, PsyDs, PharmDs, EMTs, OTs, premeds, etc., go on and on about who has the better lifestyle, who has more practice rights, who SHOULD have more practice rights, who has a better education, who makes more money and all the rest. docs (like me), do it too although i think a bit less. anyway, i think the basic question here is really one about what level and what type of care you want to be able to provide your patient.
soooooo, if you believe in the western medical model, which is based in the application of western medical sciences, the question really becomes one of what track gives you the level of training to learn and apply those sciences best for your patient. know that i'm talking AS A WHOLE here...not one aspect of one science. (ie., i will NEVER know as much about viruses as a PhD in virology does.)
now, if you prefer another medical model, there are other routes available for you. call me when your patient's gall bladder is about to explode.
anyway, to bring it back to this thread, i think the bottom line is that each individual needs to decide how far they need to go to provide the level of care they want to provide. if you think you'll be happy providing mid-level care, go the NP or PA route. you will care for people, you will make a difference in their lives, and you will have a nice lifestyle. the farm reps will take you out to dinner and if you're lucky, the occasional illicit golf outing. if you're good, you will stop worrying about all of that crap and will start worrying about doing the best for your patients. if you're good, your patients will love you and your docs will love you too. if you're not, people will die. regardless, please never believe you will have the same level of training in science or even in patient care and management as most (but not all) docs do. that's hubris and hubris is dangerous for your patients. you won't have the same level of training...and you REALLY won't understand that until you go to med school and become a doc. (ask your PA/NP friends who've done it.) after all, there is a reason PAs/NPs have restricted practice rights.
if you decide being a mid level is not enough for you then go to med school. sorry, it will be hell. long hours, enormous personal sacrifice, hard on your family...sh*tty lifestyle. you won't like a lot of your colleagues. you'll get your lifestyle someday but put that out of your mind for a decade because you have a lot of work to do. along the way, pray that you get some good science profs, interns, residents, attendings, and allied health folks who are willing to teach you something. and get ready to do a lot of learning on your own...you can never learn enough. in the end you'll come out of it better educated in the basics. and, if your hubris is subsiding, you will begin to realize just how incomplete your knowledge base is and how much further you need to go. AND you will smile at all the PAs, NPs, premeds, etc., etc., who wonder about lifestyle, level of training, and how many prescriptions for dulcolax they can write because you will start to see how much there more there is to caring for a human being.
BUT, if you graduate med school, never believe you have the same level of understanding as your intern. you won't. (hubris again.) and you won't understand that until you become an intern. likewise, the same holds true for the intern and the resident, the resident and the attending, and yes, the internist versus the surgeon on a CABG candidate or the surgeon versus the internist on IBD.
and just remember, none of us will know viruses the way the PhD in virology does. they get to smile at us!
ok, my rant is over. so with that, i return to the shadows.