Georgey,
Regarding your statement about people becoming dentists because they couldn't get into medical school, I would have to say that may be true to a MINOR extent. However, contrary to your belief, I feel that MOST students have chosen to pursue dentistry as their 1st choice for the same reasons I have. Dentistry offers autonomy, flexibility, reasonable hours, great pay, low malpractice liability, an environment almost free of HMOs, an opportunity to pursue research or academic interests, an opportunity to balance work with family life, and MORE all within the scope of a medically-related occupation. If you want to start pointing fingers about those not having an adequate gpa to get into medical school, you might want to look in your own back yard. As supported by CVPA, probably approximately 50% (if not more) students pursue D.O. school because they didn't have the gpa to get into an M.D. school. So, it really is NOT the dental students who are the M.D. rejects so much as it is the D.O. students! Almost all dental students or pre-dent students I have spoken with have a true passion to pursue dentistry believe it or not. And most of these students have never really even thought about medical school and the hellish life that goes with it. As for D.O. students, I can bet you that 1 out of 2 if not more of those students are M.D. rejects. I'm not trying to be mean here, but you are the one that brought up this issue, so I'm just shedding light on the subject... 😀
As for your claim that dentists have the highest suicide rate of any profession in the nation, that is a bogus, unsubstantiated, and unfounded claim made in the 1970s by a research study that was later proven to be without merit. Unfortunately, the tabloids got a hold of the story, blew it out of proportion, and the stigma that dentists have a high suicide rate stuck. Contrary to your belief, the suicide rate is not high for dentists and furthermore, if you were to compare the suicide rate of dentists with M.D.s or D.O.s, I am quite certain that they would be very similar.
As for your last claim that I am in the minority for pursuing dentistry, yes, you are probably right. Pre-health students I don't think really explore all the options available to them when choosing a health-related career. Granted some pursue medicine for the right reasons, others are influenced by their parents/friends to do "what they are supposed to do" or they are influenced by the media by shows such as "E.R." and "Chicago Hope" which portray a rather glamorous viewpoint of medicine. Also, some pre-meds probably feel that they will finally get respect, be a noble person, get approval of others, and earn tons of money when they finally wear that white coat with the M.D. or D.O. tag hanging from it. While choosing medicine offers no guarantees except for an above-average financial return, pursuing medicine, I feel, is an option that a LOT of pre-meds pursue for alternative motives. So in my opinion, a lot of students choose medicine blindly based not on what best suits their internal personal interests, but rather, what best suits their external agendas (money, respect, nobility, women). Now, if someone were to write down on a piece of paper all the disadvantages pertaining to the medical career, let's face it, how many students would actually want to be a medical doctor? On that list of disadvantages would include the following: Working 70-80+ hours/week, being on call, enduring seven long years of both medical school and residency training NOT to mention specialty training, graduating with a huge debt, having a high malpractice liability, being in your early to mid 30s before you start making any decent money, being around sick and dying people all day or in other words being around people at the WORST time of their lives, dealing with huge HMO companies trying to screw you over and having them regulate the medical procedures you perform on a daily basis, and finally, not really having enough time to enjoy your family, your hobbies, and just LIFE IN GENERAL, and the list goes on and on. I mean what student would really want to pursue a career with those drawbacks? Not a whole lot I would guess. So, to get back to your initial allegation that I am in the minority for pursuing dentistry--yes, that is probably true, but then again, I am also most likely in the minority of students who have fully explored all the health-related career options available before making an informed and educated decision. While I am not insinuating that all or even most students would choose dentistry over medicine, I am certainly implying that there would not be a mass herd of pre-HEALTH students scrambling to break through the medical school admission gates if more SUBJECTIVE rather than OBJECTIVE thought went into deciding a future career path.
Racerdude