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PTOSIS said:Adam,
from the posts that i have read here, u seem like a real intelligent guy, but if u think that a physician sees a challenging case that he really has to dig deep into his knowlege once a lifetime , you are crazy. i have seen my own doctor see more than 1 REALLY unusual case just on my family memebers. the problem is that often the unusual cases are masked as something very common. so lets say it's 1 case out of 500. well, guess what? i don't want my mother, child, etc beeing that pt. I think there's a NEED for PA's. there are certain things that physicians do that require v.little knowlege that we are trained for in school/residency. here's what i would go to a PA for: throat cultures/physicals/pap smears/sutures./vaccines/allergy shots or any things that require repition to learn. i have a friend who is a pa. he does cardiac steninting all day. guess what? he probably does it better than a cardiologist b/c he does it all day. but when it comes to the diagnosis/treatmet/management of serious diseases (which happen much more often then you say) i want a physician for my mom/child. btw, on my own extended family i can tell you that there have been 4 problems that present with a very mild complaint that could easily be dismissed but would be fatal if not picked up. as someone who just took her boards, i am still amazed at the complexity of disease processes. i do not know all of them, but i have the TOOLS to pick up any text and have the v.basics to begin learning it all. anyway, i wish you luck with your career and i look forward to working with you future PAs in the future. ptosis
adamdowannabe said:Ptosis, what on earth do you think PA's learn? Everything you just described is CNA/LVN work, you should pick up a PA school's list of coursework and educate yourself a little more. Any PA (or PA student for that matter) has the same TOOLS you claim you have to pick up a medical text, it's called a brain! Re-read my post, nowhere did I mention physicians only see interesting cases once a lifetime, if you can point out anywhere that is stated, I will be more then happy to give you a cookie and pat you on the head, and tell you what a good girl you are, but everything else you wrote is is barely comprehendible english, so please try again. If you want to voice an opinion, and you want people to have the most remote faith in what you write you MUST write intelligently, or your effort is wasted.
Throat cultures and allergy shots, are you kidding? You can't be serious. When was the last time anyone besides a nurse gave an allergy shot or a vaccination?
Wow, peoples ignorance is worse then I had ever imagined!
Ptosis, I challenge you to visit a PA school's list of prereqs, and then view their coursework and maybe even find some syllabi and then come back and tell me a PA is only good for "repetition skills" Hello? If a PA wasn't capable of making difficult clinical decisions and diagnoses why would they be allowed to do so in 50 states and DC? Either you think far too highly of yourself, or you don't know what does into educating physician assistants, I think it's the latter. Vaccines and allergy shots, I'm laughing so hard I'm crying!
PTOSIS said:first of all, re comprehension of my posts, i was incredibly tired when i wrote that as i am taking care of my somewhat demented grandmother this week...
didn't u say this?
"I am sure there are many physicians, who spend their whole career and never come across a case that a PA couldn't handle as informed and as effectively as a physician" that's what my post has been directed at.
i am v.familiar w/coursework for PA's, there's a PA school at my med school, have friends, etc. are there PA's that function at the same level as physicians? absolutely. are there PA's who are better clinicians than some? yes. should that be the standard? in my opinion, no. it boils down to this. if a pa can do everything that a MD?DO can, what's the point of med school? don't tell me that we are all smart/can pick stuff up as we go. i do not think that one year of preclinicals is enough to learn all the tools that you need for lifelong learning. btw, the things that i mentioned-paps, throat cultures/paps, shots are not done by nurses. in my short 26 years, they have all been done by my physician. anyway, one of two things is true if we are all doing the same thing: physicians are overtrained or PA/NP are undertrained. one final thought, when you go see a physician, you know that he has at least 3 years of residency training. when you see a PA it could be someone who has been in practice for 30 years and because of the experience knows everything, or it could be someone who finished school last year. a patient never knows. anywho, i hope that you did not perceive animosity from me, like i said all those things that i mentioned are routinelly performed by doctors. i was just saying that i don't agree with your opinion.
PTOSIS said:first of all, re comprehension of my posts, i was incredibly tired when i wrote that as i am taking care of my somewhat demented grandmother this week...
didn't u say this?
"I am sure there are many physicians, who spend their whole career and never come across a case that a PA couldn't handle as informed and as effectively as a physician" that's what my post has been directed at.
i am v.familiar w/coursework for PA's, there's a PA school at my med school, have friends, etc. are there PA's that function at the same level as physicians? absolutely. are there PA's who are better clinicians than some? yes. should that be the standard? in my opinion, no. it boils down to this. if a pa can do everything that a MD?DO can, what's the point of med school? don't tell me that we are all smart/can pick stuff up as we go. i do not think that one year of preclinicals is enough to learn all the tools that you need for lifelong learning. btw, the things that i mentioned-paps, throat cultures/paps, shots are not done by nurses. in my short 26 years, they have all been done by my physician. anyway, one of two things is true if we are all doing the same thing: physicians are overtrained or PA/NP are undertrained. one final thought, when you go see a physician, you know that he has at least 3 years of residency training. when you see a PA it could be someone who has been in practice for 30 years and because of the experience knows everything, or it could be someone who finished school last year. a patient never knows. anywho, i hope that you did not perceive animosity from me, like i said all those things that i mentioned are routinelly performed by doctors. i was just saying that i don't agree with your opinion.
PTOSIS said:first of all, re comprehension of my posts, i was incredibly tired when i wrote that as i am taking care of my somewhat demented grandmother this week...
didn't u say this?
"I am sure there are many physicians, who spend their whole career and never come across a case that a PA couldn't handle as informed and as effectively as a physician" that's what my post has been directed at.
i am v.familiar w/coursework for PA's, there's a PA school at my med school, have friends, etc. are there PA's that function at the same level as physicians? absolutely. are there PA's who are better clinicians than some? yes. should that be the standard? in my opinion, no. it boils down to this. if a pa can do everything that a MD?DO can, what's the point of med school? don't tell me that we are all smart/can pick stuff up as we go. i do not think that one year of preclinicals is enough to learn all the tools that you need for lifelong learning. btw, the things that i mentioned-paps, throat cultures/paps, shots are not done by nurses. in my short 26 years, they have all been done by my physician. anyway, one of two things is true if we are all doing the same thing: physicians are overtrained or PA/NP are undertrained. one final thought, when you go see a physician, you know that he has at least 3 years of residency training. when you see a PA it could be someone who has been in practice for 30 years and because of the experience knows everything, or it could be someone who finished school last year. a patient never knows. anywho, i hope that you did not perceive animosity from me, like i said all those things that i mentioned are routinelly performed by doctors. i was just saying that i don't agree with your opinion.
stevo23 said:I have a general question for current PA's that I think would belong in the current thread. Do you feel the curriculum that PA's receive (generally, I know each school is different) satisfies the interest you have in medicine and the body? I know it isn't quite the detail to which med students are educated, but just wondering if you ever ask yourself "why didn't I learn that" or "I wish we would've covered that in more detail." I'm not really worried about being the "assistant" or not having the final say. I know the PA still plays a very vital role to the healthcare team. I just want to know more about the schooling and quality of class and lab, etc. Thanks so much for any feedback.
Steve
Fond of Cabbage said:Maybe he meant that he had good technical skills. From what I've heard, CT Sx PAs pretty frequently take care of their patients in the CCU, so their knoweldge of medicine would have to be recognized there, unless maybe that wasn't what he was hired to do. I'm just a student, so I don't know, but when I was a nurse in the OR, I heard surgeons compliment other surgeons by saying how technically great they were. Is it possible you just took the wrong meaning?
By the way, this isn't supposed to be a malignant post, I actually respect your posts a lot, even though I haven't met you. You seem to be a very intelligent person, so don't take this post the wrong way.
primadonna22274 said:To answer your question succinctly, yes, I learned in PA school what I needed to know to practice effectively and safely as a PA.
My master's project was to answer that very question: to survey the first class of graduates (new program at that time) and their supervising physicians and ask: how well prepared were you by the program for your work as a PA in your first job? The answers were overwhelmingly positive; I can't recall the statistics exactly but somewhere around a 4 out of 5 on a Likert scale. An interesting, although not unique, trend was noted: the supervising physicians consistently rated their PAs as BETTER prepared than did the PAs themselves. This is actually borne out in medical training literature over the past thirty years: those who know what we actually need to know are better evaluators of how much we know than the PAs or MDs being evaluated.
Did PA school prepare me adequately to function as a physician? Well, no...but it wasn't supposed to. I am not a physician. But I will be one when I grow up! The problem is that more and more, PAs in primary care especially are being forced into the role of a physician. I carry a caseload of primary patients who come to ME first and foremost for their healthcare. Some of them are really sick. Some of them make me nervous. When I need help, I get it, and my supervising and collaborating docs are fabulous and always willing to help me, but it's still on my shoulders. This trend isn't going away; fewer MDs & DOs are going into primary care so PAs and NPs are expected to fill that gap. I think in a group practice setting where the clinician has personal and institutional support, that's OK. I think in a rural setting where you put an untested PA or NP out in the sticks because no MD wants to go there, it could be disastrous. Not because they don't know everything, but because when there's something they've not seen before or don't recognize and there's no MD or DO around (or for that matter a seasoned PA or NP) to bounce ideas off of, something serious could get missed. No way in hell would you find me practicing independently in the middle of rural America without close backup and at least five years of experience, but it happens.
On the other hand, I'm using suburban standard-of-care thinking to apply to rural medicine, and maybe that's unfair. Any other thoughts?
Lisa PA-C
p.s. Iliketocut: I like you but I still think you think PAs are just "good technicians". (Visible shudder.) When I did my CT surg rotation in PA school, one of the masterful surgeons thought he was paying my attending PA a compliment when he said "Mark's a good technician". I knew then and there I couldn't go into CT surg because I didn't want to be just a "technician". Surgical PAs might get roped into the OR so much you forget they are trained as generalists first and foremost, and that's what PAs excel in: general medicine. This generalist training is what makes it possible for PAs more than any other group to move laterally from one specialty to the next. NPs can't do that to nearly the degree we can; nor can MDs (not without doing another residency or fellowship anyway).
iliketocut said:Lisa:
The attending you refer to was giving the PA a compliment in this situation. All of us, when we are in the OR, are learning to be technicians. Operating is a technical skill. The term "surgeon" refers to someone who has not only mastered a technical skill, but is able to manage a patient's pre and post op problems (i.e. the medicine aspect) of things as well. I do not agree that MD's cannot move laterally-as a surgeon, I am learning not only to operate independently on my patients, but manage them as well. I went into surgery for this exact reason-unlike general medicine people, you actually get to fix the problem instead of think about it!
iliketocut said:Lisa:
The attending you refer to was giving the PA a compliment in this situation. All of us, when we are in the OR, are learning to be technicians. Operating is a technical skill. The term "surgeon" refers to someone who has not only mastered a technical skill, but is able to manage a patient's pre and post op problems (i.e. the medicine aspect) of things as well. I do not agree that MD's cannot move laterally-as a surgeon, I am learning not only to operate independently on my patients, but manage them as well. I went into surgery for this exact reason-unlike general medicine people, you actually get to fix the problem instead of think about it!
hospPA said:Or you get the luxury to have the IM team sit on the patient for a week for you while you decide whether or not to take them to the OR![]()
Sorry, I couldn't resist. And for the record, I have the utmost respect for surgeons, I just run into this sort of thing all the time.
Pat
corpsmanUP said:Tell you what though Pat, if there was an impending nuclear detonation approaching that would emit a signal causing either surgeons or internists to be anihilated off the face of the earth, I would try and program it to destroy the internists if I had to sacrifice one for the other. Surgery is an art form that not anyone can do, but medicine can be done by anyone. People at the bottom of their classes go into medicine often because its their only option, and although they might not train at Hopkins, they did train somewhere. Surgery had only 2 categorical spots in the country go unfilled this year in the match. It has been my experience as well that surgeons know a lot more about medicine than they want to admit, because they don't want to deal with it. And why should they? I have seen a whole lot more surgeons who were well rounded physicians with knowledge of medicine than I have ever seen an internist who knows his a$$ from a 5mm scope!!![]()
So no offense to medicine guys, but thats sort of just how the heirarchy of medicine is. Sorry, I couldn't resist! 😉
hospPA said:So, cardiologists, rheumatologists, endocrinologists, gastroenterologists were all in the bottom of their medical school class? Come on.
The other thing I see is that the top candidates from medical school enter orthopedics in a lot of instances. What I see must be a secret pact or agreement they must sign that says they must immediately, upon entering residency, forget everything they know about EVERY medical condition including diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, etc.
I do not see this from the general surgery type guys. Maybe because "general" type practices have to remember something about everything, not forget everything but their specific specialty.
There are more spots in medicine, so obviously you will get some underachievers. I take issue that all or most of those who go into medicine are such. That is just not true.
The pseudo-hierarchy you have envisioned only exists in the minds of those who possess the dreaded "god complex".
Good day,
Pat

corpsmanUP said:Pat, PA, friend, pal, the English language is a beautiful thing to embrace. Sometimes things get merky though even among 2 experts of said language. If you read my previous post again, you will see that I said "People at the bottom of their classes go into medicine often because its their only option". What this means is exactly what it says. It means that there ARE people in the bottom of every class (probably 50% of the bottom quarter) that go into medicine, because there are plenty of spots, and plenty of bodies to fill them. But as you pointed out, the rubber meets the road somewhere in the application process for subspecialty. I did not, however, state that all those who go into medicine are in the bottom of their class. I merely said that the bottom of the class has a lot more internists than it has surgeons. No one will dispute that fact. Its darn rare to find a surgeon who was not above the mean across the board with grades and board scores. For medicine, you can find a spot with a passing score and the worst class rank. Thats just life.
True, ortho is at the top of the list. But the fact that they don't want to deal with anything medical is the same reason the internists call ortho at 3AM for simple cellulitis of an extremity, simple non-displaced fractures that can wait a day, and for emergency back pain. It goes both ways.
I am going into family medicine where I won't have the excuse that either of these groups use to turn a blind eye to a condition. Instead, I'll just close both of mine and try something!!![]()
adamdowannabe said:You making a blanketed comment that MD's would not want to trade places with a PA can't be more wrong, I have met a LOT of physicians, who have been practicing medicine for 25-30 years, who have told me if they even knew about the career of physician assistant, or if it was available such as medical school was available, they would have become a PA instead of becoming a physician.
I am wondering if you are still young, a resident? Still new to your career, and not having been faced with a lot of what being a doctor involves? (just a guess.......on my part)
cali7925 said:Every M.D./D.O. has to deal with nurse's, P.A.'s, P.T.'s etc. thinking that they could do the job of a doctor...so many of these professionals are p***** off that they dont make the money docs make and claim that they, "know just as much" and would be able to "diagnose just as well". I have this to say, get your heads out of your as***. P.A.'s have so many fewer years of training in physiology and medicine, there is NO WAY they could replace doctors. I mean, I understand docs are arrogant as H*** and it is a real Pain in the a** to work with a lot of them, but when nurse's P.A's and other members of the health care team get just as arrogant, all hell breaks loose and they function as a dysfunctional team providing substandard care. Each member of the team has their own responsibilities....the P.A. is to ASSIST the physician, not compete with them. If you wanted an M.D. or want one, go get one. Nuff said.
I would have to say many pre-med students DO have health care experience 🙂emedpa said:the avg md applicant does not qualify for pa school admission.there is this little requirement called "prior healthcare experience", something most premeds don't have. take a kaplan course, retake the mcat and go to medschool. also look into carib med schools -they are less picky about mcats.
cali7925 said:Every M.D./D.O. has to deal with nurse's, P.A.'s, P.T.'s etc. thinking that they could do the job of a doctor...so many of these professionals are p***** off that they dont make the money docs make and claim that they, "know just as much" and would be able to "diagnose just as well". I have this to say, get your heads out of your as***. P.A.'s have so many fewer years of training in physiology and medicine, there is NO WAY they could replace doctors. I mean, I understand docs are arrogant as H*** and it is a real Pain in the a** to work with a lot of them, but when nurse's P.A's and other members of the health care team get just as arrogant, all hell breaks loose and they function as a dysfunctional team providing substandard care. Each member of the team has their own responsibilities....the P.A. is to ASSIST the physician, not compete with them. If you wanted an M.D. or want one, go get one. Nuff said.
P.A.'s have so many fewer years of training in physiology and medicine, there is NO WAY they could replace doctors.
I'm not talking about volunteer stuff here....paid/professional full time medical experience as required by most good pa programs.....mx_599 said:I would have to say many pre-med students DO have health care experience 🙂
I guess...maybe I have worked harder than many premeds. I have tons of paid healthcare work throughout college.emedpa said:I'm not talking about volunteer stuff here....paid/professional full time medical experience as required by most good pa programs.....
how many paramedics, resp. therapists, rn's, and physical therapists in a typical medschool class of 100? maybe 3 or 4?.....more so for D.O. because they value older applicants more so than MD programs but even then we are probably talking about 10-15 out of 100......
adamdowannabe said:Oh yeah,
The majority of my post, was concerned with the idea that I was quoted as saying I know physicians who would like to have the role of PA if given the option, which was refuted by an argument about the amount of medical school time devoted to the study of PHYSIOLOGY (which had no relevence to my comment whatsoever), and only PHYSIOLOGY, it wasn't an argument about about complete undergrad curriculum, or comparing the undergrad of the PA student to the Medical student, it was merely that of the requirement of PHYSIOLOGY, but I appreciate having words put in my mouth, next time, just ask me for my sign on info, and you can write my posts for me, save me the trouble from trying to have a little fun!
And, also, don't snap at me for choosing a career path that will take me 1/4 the time to give myself a similar job description. You can take all your medical school hassles, shelf exams, worries about matching in what you want, and all the ulitmate decision making responsiblity and all the pain in the ass everyone says the entirety of residency is, the hassles of billing, and getting your money from reimbursement, and enjoy the specialty which you committed to, without really knowing if you will love it for then next 30 years, enjoy it, you earned it! And I am sure I will enjoy being an PA for all the exact same reasons, and the freedoms it allows. And from now on, I will change my SDN name and never bring up medical school again. I don't mean to use it as a crutch to prove my points.
SoRRy.
I will go back into my sad little PA fantasy world, the one where PA's get to see patients, and make diagnosis, and prescribe medications, and problem solve, and have patients.......oh who are we kidding, we all know all a PA does is follow an MD around and get them coffee and stuff right?
corpsmanUP said:Well if its all as good as you say it is perhaps I should have stayed a PA heh? But I guess you know everything about the PA world and all that comes with it. Trust me, unless you are one of the oldtimers with a niche practice, you are not going to be the PA that you mentioned. Good times have past for new PA's, and its only the emeds and Bandits of the world that live the high life. Everything I said came from your post. If the words fit, wear them. Until you have walked in both a PA and a physician's shoes, you will not ever truly know the difference. I thought I knew once, and I was wrong. I'll tell you for sure real soon when I start residency 🙂
I am not trying to bring you down, just bring you down to earth. If you think the conversations we all share here are bad, wait until you explain yourself daily and still have your friends asking you how you drive a Lexus drawing blood for a living. PA's deserve more respect for what they do, but so do garbage men and iron workers. Life stinks sometimes.
corpsmanUP said:You try to inflate the PA curriculum and deflate the medical school curriculum by stating the only real difference is the more in depth pathology. I hate to tell you this, but that is only the beginning of the differences. The main difference is that medical students take incredibly painful and difficult national board shelf exams after each 3rd year rotation, each equivilant in difficulty to the PA's 1 board exam. Then med students take 2 steps of the USMLE, and 1 additional step in residency. The post residency there is a board exam for your specialty. I realize in PA school there are exams after each rotation, but these are internal and not standardized. We too take the internal exams, added to the hassle of the external board for EACH rotation.
A PA's basic science curriculum as standardized by the council is quite "basic". And you cannot possibly use that argument about how PA students have much more in depth undergrad sciences, because the vast majority of med students have a biomedical science degree. A year of undergrad A&P is like taking a stroll on the beach compared to medical school level A&P.
Then you add in residency. A lot of PA's will say that their first few years out of school are their residency. Until you have gone through 3 years of incrementally expanded scope of practice under "real" supervision, having averaged well close to 80 hours per week, then you have not done a residency. And in the end, it is honestly the residency that separates a PA from an MD. So please don't try and argue that physicians do not have a significant more training than a PA, because we all know that they do. And until a time that you have been to medical school, you are not capable of commenting on the true difference anyway.
I can tell you are headed toward dissatisfaction and being illcontent as a PA. if you are already arguing so hard for a case you don't even have the experience to know about, you are never going to be satisfied. The best PA's are the ones who do their jobs incredibly and earn their respect through deeds. You cannot expect that an entire profession of competing providers is going to be embraced by an entire profession of physicians. The PA's level of respect and status among his/her peers is an individual fight that must be fought and won by each individual PA. Its not about trying to make an argument for the profession as a whole. That argument will never get you anywhere.
I hope you really can stomach being a PA, because in the end the only person who has to be happy with it is you. But right now you aren't convincing anyone that you are a happy little PA.
niko327 said:Dude you are right. Alot of PA school hopefuls might not want to believe it, but I think you're right. I am about to graduate the PA program. I have met medical students during my clinical training and I have to say that I was quite often very impressed with their level of knowledge (clinical skills were same as any other PA student honestly). From what I've seen I can definitely see what you're talking about. Take this and couple it with the residency requirements of 80+ hours and I can see why the doc is the doc. That being said, I can also say that PA school was no walk in the park (as I'm sure you know). If I had only one word to describe PA school it would be: INTENSE. No doubt that med school will literally teach you MORE about everything, but I wonder if it will be as INTENSE. Maybe you could tell us when you get through the first couple of years of it, I'd really like to know. In the end I can think of no better way to prepare for becoming a physician than becoming a PA first. I hope to get the opportunity to do this very thing in the near future.
adamdowannabe said:So, CorpsmanUP!
What was it that had you deciding to quit a career that had you in a nice job, paid very well, as autonomous as you wanted to..... to get the medical education. If I have read between the lines correctly, it wasn't because you were treated badly as a midlevel, so my guess is it has everything to do with your internal drive to learn MORE MORE MORE about medicine! An MSII at the one of the schools I got into sat down and talked with me about my choice, he said "what happens after 5-8 years in practice as a PA, and you are as proficient as your supervisor, and you hit that "glass ceiling" as far as being a PA affords. What do you do then?" (that was his argument that I should "go all the way") my response to him was....... look for a new position in a new specialty, and start the growth all over again.
I am one of those strange people, that finds more joy in the struggle, then reaching a goal. Once the goal has been met, I need a new struggle. Hence the idea of switching specialties, that and my extreme ADHD.
I am sure you have had words with the other PA to Med students at your school, is the explanation usually the same? IS it about the mastery of medicine, or other goals that drive you to medical school?
I didn't have much time to thoroughly think all this through, and so it is true, I still think about it, (although the options are now gone) But, at least in the case of becoming a PA, the option of medical school still exisits, although the revearse cenario doesn't exisit. It's one of those situations, where you have to ask people questions, ad take what they tell you as the truth and helpful advice, But it's obvious, the right decision cannot be made until after the experiences are first person.
*about the lexus on a blood drawers salary, if you can drive a porsche on a bartenders salary, people shouldn't be shocked at anything. Just say you dabble in the market!
Adam, I have to agree to an extent here with the above poster. You seem to be very bright and write well, but it takes too long to read your posts! 😀 You must be a fast typist or spend lots of time here! (me- I hunt and peck still combined with too much time here)corpsmanUP said:I feel really bad for your Adam. If you think that your speech is going to make anyone but yourself feel better about your predicament, then you are wrong. You are not quite at that point where you can justify your own decision to become a PA, and thus you continue to make points that you feel strengthen your stance.
Lisa,primadonna22274 said:My boyfriend's brother (who had entertained the idea of med school and decided against it) told me I should apply, get accepted, and make peace with that i.e. not go. ??? On some level he made sense. On the other, it seems a shame to do all the prep and not go.
At this point, I'm fairly sure if I do go I won't be able to afford it until 2007. Sorry guys...I'm rambling here. I'll wrap up.
Anyway, good luck to all of you,
Lisa
mx_599 said:Lisa,
I think your BF brother made a good suggestion. Don't worry about what you might go through and then decide not to follow through. Worry about it when the time comes.
Brian
you're only 31...you have plenty of time for all that stuff and a family. furthermore, depending on what you want to do after medical school, you don't need to be at the top of your class.primadonna22274 said:Thanks all.
I dunno...gotta think a bit. There are times (like this morning) when I think gee, do I really want to work all the time and not have time for a family, my garden, my puppies? All for a bit more R-E-S-P-E-C-T? Hmmm. Maybe I just need a career change (specialty change).
You've all got me thinking anyway. That's never a bad thing.
🙂
L.
mx_599 said:you're only 31...you have plenty of time for all that stuff and a family. furthermore, depending on what you want to do after medical school, you don't need to be at the top of your class.
so after specializing in another area of PA for 6-8 years don't you think you might look back and say, "I could have been done with medical school by now and in a residency....I wish I could be 31 again"
don't think the excitement and freshness of a new PA field will last forever. the longing/wonderment of becoming a physician will surely creep back.
at least if you go for it, get accepted, and decide not to go you will always know that you "could have" (the drop out rate is very low)
Isn't that what the tv show Northern Exposure was like?corpsmanUP said:I want to be in a small town being a doctor for a place where no one else wants to go. I want to have people say hello to me at the movies, and at the grocery store. I want my kids to be know as "docs kids".
corpsmanUP said:Like Prima, my reasons for wanting to be the doctor were more than just knowledge. I firmly believe that in life, one should reap the rewards for the career they choose, even outside of work. My close friends include guys who are teachers, coaches, bankers, lawyers, plumbers, and salesmen. Each of them is completely happy with who they have become. I though probably have some unmet childhood need to feel important, who knows! I probably could have got the same level of contentment as going to medical school by simply paying for a therapist for the same timeframe!!![]()
Think about that one Lisa before you spend all the money to be important! But in the process I have realized that being a doctor is who I want to be. I want to be in a small town being a doctor for a place where no one else wants to go. I want to have people say hello to me at the movies, and at the grocery store. I want my kids to be know as "docs kids". I want my wife to enjoy life and not have to work. But I am not just someone seeking importance, because I also seek to make a HUGE difference. I felt I could not make that big a difference as a PA.
About the cost though Lisa, you will never be able to afford medical school, and you have to be better off than most now. One rule about med school like no other professional school is that they don't care how much debt you have from before, they will still throw all the money at you that you can sign for. If you want to do it, take it in stages, MCAT, application, interview, waiting......, 1st year, 2nd year. etc......
It flies by I can promise you. I'll still a few years shy of 40 when I am done with residency, but I look young 😉
Being just a bit older in med school pays dividends for faculty and staff acceptance and treatment. I have had nothing but complete respect from the physicians I have trained under and they are all very impressed that I would take this route!
FYI, if you want to have a family, med school is actually not a barrier. Residency is to a degree, but who knows, you might find your man in your class!! It happens so often that I can't even count!
RAMPA said:I still lean towards PA (I am shadowing one right now), but for others who may be in my shoes.........what was that "thing, factor, etc" that you choose one over the other????????