PhD vs MD/PhD

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NukeAge

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I was just wondering what the difference is between what you can do with a PhD versus an MD/PhD. I am aiming towards PhD because I really love molecular biology/biochemistry. I did crystallography research this last summer and found it very exciting. I would have done it for free but fortunatly they paid me. I am doing bioinorganic chemistry this semester and I really do like it, altough it is too chemistry for me to end up in. What I would really like to do is some genetics research. I just finished taking Genetics, and I found the class, and more specifically, the problems we had, to be games :laugh:. If you have't interpeted a southern blot into a restriction map you really should try it. I think I'm going to email my professor for some more of those games. Its interesting, my brother can't get over how much I love studying. But anyway, do MD/PhDs do more of this kind of stuff or more people stuff? I must admit, I'm not really a people person and this was what first turned me off to clinical work.
 
MD PhDs can do either. You will be faced with no objections if you want to, and MANY MD PhDs do, just bench work, like what you described.

However, except for a few fields, there isn't that much need for the MD, if you are sure that's all you want. Granted, it would (marginally, very marginally) help, but I highly doubt it's worth 4 yrs. In medical school, you will have to do clinical work.

The additional MD will give you:
The liscence to interact with patients in your study (however, you could also just hire a nurse-researcher if you just did PhD).

The knowledge of disease processes that relate to your science.

The flexibilty of practicing also (however you would need residency)

A wee bit of more reputation when a grant is written by xxx, MD PhD

sonya
 
sonya,

A phd-only researcher desiring to work with patients needs more than a nurse, they would need to work with an MD/DO.
 
I'd tell you to stick with a PhD. The MD part really does give you more experience in people stuff, and through those 2 years of med school (3rd and 4th year) and residency your primary focus will not be on research, but on the care of patients. Many MD/PhDs do go off from that and do basic science research with their careers, however, if your goal is to go do science from the get-go, why waste time in extended education?

So I guess what I'm trying to say is if you have a real good reason for wanting to go MD/PhD, go for it. If you're looking for reasons to dissuade you out of just PhD, you probably won't find any good ones.
 
Is the effect of applying for a faculty position with an MD/PhD and for grants with the same worth the extra 4 years you would spend in school if you didn't want to deal with patients? I have nothing against patients only I think I would see them as science projects and not as people.
 
Hi,

I don't think it is always a 4-year difference: it can be as little as 1 or 2 (I've known plenty of graduate students who took 5.5-6 years, as well as MD/PhDs who took 7-8). It is not simply 4 years of med school appended onto a regular Ph.D. program. Also, some Ph.D. graduates are now having to do 2 postdocs before getting any job offers, which doesn't make residency seem so long, either.

Also, I think the MD training will give you a broader understanding of human biology than many Ph.D.s have. I just read a quote from the crystallographer Stephen Burley who, after getting a D. Phil and postdoctoral training, decided to go to medical school: "'I decided that I didn't know enough biology to be useful." Of course you could make it a goal to learn human biology over the course of a regular Ph.D. program - it's just that no one is going to force you to do it, and it may be tempting to over-specialize.

Plus, many Ph.D. graduates end up working in industry, whereas MD/PhDs have little trouble getting faculty positions at medical schools. I prefer academia to industry (more freedom and job security, at least after a few years), but this may be a personal preference not applicable to others.
 
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