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- Attending Physician
Right now, I'm in my third year of a Ph.D. in cognitive neuroscience, with a strong focus in neurolinguistics, and my program should be wrapped up by the end of my fifth year (my department is pretty ruthless about easing people out who go over this deadline). I have come to the realization over the past couple weeks that I genuinely do not give a crud about most of the stuff I am expected to get excited over and be interested in as a cognitive neuroscientist; I am tired of having to think and argue about things that I am not sure are real.
I have, however, had the opportunity to do some research with collaborators at NIH (including the chief of a section) on a patient with a very interesting language-related neurological disorder, and will be presenting this research at a couple of fairly prominent international conferences and have published a review article on another, different language-related neurological disorder. When I think about why I got into this racket in the first place, it's mostly because I am fascinated by neurological disorders, and it was the easiest way to get there from an undergraduate background that began in the humanities (long story).
I have decided that I would honestly prefer to be a neurologist and get to work with disordered patients all the time rather than only occasionally as a great and special privilege, and I think I would rather be involved in treatment/clinically applicable research rather than basic science. I don't so much care if the theories under which I operate on a day to day basis are flawed in some way, provided they allow one to actually DO something with them.
So, long-winded, I know. here's the gist: I have read the posts on this forum pretty extensively, and here's my situation. I will be turning 25 when I finish my Ph.D, and have no pre-existing student debt. I am not quite sure what my undergraduate GPA is, simply because I went to a British university for undergrad (got a first, if anyone is familiar with the translation). Haven't done MCATS or the prereq courses yet, but am fairly confident that I can do well on said courses and have opportunities to take them while in grad school. Not so much worried about LORs or explaining why I want to switch at this point (can hold forth for AGES on the topic). My major weakness is, of course, lack of shadowing/volunteering/patient experience.
Assuming that I don't run screaming after getting such patient experience, is this a non-crazy idea? Yes, I know doing it after a Ph.D. is suboptimal, but I'm hesitant to abandon the Ph.D. at this point, particularly because I just received a sizeable training grant that will be helpful in saving up some for living expenses in med school.
Any advice would be most appreciated, like how will my weird GPA affect my chances? What sorts of ECs should I specifically seek out, and how much? What things should I emphasize in interviews given that backstory?
I have, however, had the opportunity to do some research with collaborators at NIH (including the chief of a section) on a patient with a very interesting language-related neurological disorder, and will be presenting this research at a couple of fairly prominent international conferences and have published a review article on another, different language-related neurological disorder. When I think about why I got into this racket in the first place, it's mostly because I am fascinated by neurological disorders, and it was the easiest way to get there from an undergraduate background that began in the humanities (long story).
I have decided that I would honestly prefer to be a neurologist and get to work with disordered patients all the time rather than only occasionally as a great and special privilege, and I think I would rather be involved in treatment/clinically applicable research rather than basic science. I don't so much care if the theories under which I operate on a day to day basis are flawed in some way, provided they allow one to actually DO something with them.
So, long-winded, I know. here's the gist: I have read the posts on this forum pretty extensively, and here's my situation. I will be turning 25 when I finish my Ph.D, and have no pre-existing student debt. I am not quite sure what my undergraduate GPA is, simply because I went to a British university for undergrad (got a first, if anyone is familiar with the translation). Haven't done MCATS or the prereq courses yet, but am fairly confident that I can do well on said courses and have opportunities to take them while in grad school. Not so much worried about LORs or explaining why I want to switch at this point (can hold forth for AGES on the topic). My major weakness is, of course, lack of shadowing/volunteering/patient experience.
Assuming that I don't run screaming after getting such patient experience, is this a non-crazy idea? Yes, I know doing it after a Ph.D. is suboptimal, but I'm hesitant to abandon the Ph.D. at this point, particularly because I just received a sizeable training grant that will be helpful in saving up some for living expenses in med school.
Any advice would be most appreciated, like how will my weird GPA affect my chances? What sorts of ECs should I specifically seek out, and how much? What things should I emphasize in interviews given that backstory?