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Everything you said is totally fine. Have you looked into PA school? You get to do most of what a doctor does, with a fraction of the training and debt. Good flexibility and job security. Average PA pay will afford you a comfortable lifestyle as well.I'm at a bit of a cross-roads in my life. I just graduated recently, a Biology BA with a 3.70 GPA. I'm definitely what you would call a lazy student, I scraped by, and I'm realizing that I don't think I can handle the kind of lifestyle that med school, residency, and being a doctor entails. However, I've always been drawn into medicine, particularly its money and prestige (I'm not afraid to say this. Many people here are delusional if you don't think these are important factors in a lifelong career).
However, I also agree that medicine is simply too difficult to succeed in if you don't have the commitment and drive for it. And I don't think I do. My goals in life involve having a comfortable, nice lifestyle, and not too stressful; and I know I simply don't have that drive to strive for the top of the top lifestyle residencies/specialties. I don't think I'm passionate for medicine, like many others are, so I do not think it be wise for me to pursue it. The question is, what else can I do?
I constantly see on this forum "don't go into medicine for the money, there are much easier ways of making similar amounts of money with way less work". What are these professions? Are these directed at people who haven't even started in undergrad yet? Because with my Biology major, I really feel like I don't have any more options now 🙁 I had planned to go into medicine, but now that that dream is dying, do I have any other career options I can go to? (Without having to redo my entire undergrad)
Am I screwed?
Everything you said is totally fine. Have you looked into PA school? You get to do most of what a doctor does, with a fraction of the training and debt. Good flexibility and job security. Average PA pay will afford you a comfortable lifestyle as well.
Clinical Lab TechI'm at a bit of a cross-roads in my life. I just graduated recently, a Biology BA with a 3.70 GPA. I'm definitely what you would call a lazy student, I scraped by, and I'm realizing that I don't think I can handle the kind of lifestyle that med school, residency, and being a doctor entails. However, I've always been drawn into medicine, particularly its money and prestige (I'm not afraid to say this. Many people here are delusional if you don't think these are important factors in a lifelong career).
However, I also agree that medicine is simply too difficult to succeed in if you don't have the commitment and drive for it. And I don't think I do. My goals in life involve having a comfortable, nice lifestyle, and not too stressful; and I know I simply don't have that drive to strive for the top of the top lifestyle residencies/specialties. I don't think I'm passionate for medicine, like many others are, so I do not think it be wise for me to pursue it. The question is, what else can I do?
I constantly see on this forum "don't go into medicine for the money, there are much easier ways of making similar amounts of money with way less work". What are these professions? Are these directed at people who haven't even started in undergrad yet? Because with my Biology major, I really feel like I don't have any more options now 🙁 I had planned to go into medicine, but now that that dream is dying, do I have any other career options I can go to? (Without having to redo my entire undergrad)
Am I screwed?
People don't really seem to realize this: When you plan to become a Physician Assistant, you are going into medicine. It is a different career than a doctor, but a Physician Assistant practices medicine.
Unfortunately if you actually engage in a conversation with these very people you will find that they are delusional. There was a previous thread called Medicine as a Career which boiled down to a user stating that computer science was "...fast and relatively easy money..." in which "... starting salary around 60k which grows up 150+ over few years. No college, enjoyable schedule, good money, great job security, total life time earnings close to PCP." If it talks like a ridiculous sales pitch, walks like a ridiculous sales pitch, and smells like a ridiculous sales pitch then it is a safe bet to attribute it to being a ridiculous sales pitch.Many people here are delusional... I constantly see on this forum "don't go into medicine for the money, there are much easier ways of making similar amounts of money with way less work".
People who say that you shouldn't go into medicine for the sake of money without elaborating why are dumb. What they mean is that the potential roof is limited in medicine whereas in other fields such as business it is not. There is no other profession in this world that will guarantee you a high base salary as medicine (physician). But if you're lucky, you may be one of those lazy people who work in the basement a couple of hours a week and then sell your game to Microsoft for 2.5 billion USD (Notch) or act in a crappy hollywood movie and get paid 8-9 figures for each movie. But the odds of doing that are comparable to winning the jackpot. But yes, people are right, that's where most money is. But they never explain that you're 0,000001 % likely to achieve that lol. Hard work won't get you there.
If money is your goal and you don't want to take major risks then work yourself to IM residency. Work as a hospitalist and during your 7 days off channel your entrepreneurial spirit and start some form of business and pray that it turns out successful. Hospitalists (maybe EM too) have the best schedule for the business interested. And if things crap themselves, you always have your guaranteed 250-300k+ a year salary as hospitalist to pull back to.
Medicine is stable money - even during an economic downturn, you will likely have a job. But doing medicine solely for the money is a bad idea.
CS, finance, consulting, engineering may sound good from the outside for the same reason medicine sounds good from the outside - people see the potential paycheck and don't think about the steps leading up to it.
CS isn't easy money - the folks who make six figures out of college worked hard to get to that point. It's not easy to get a job at a well paying well known company and even then, some places (anecdotally Amazon, FB from my friends) are miserable places to work at.
Finance/economics jobs still require good grades in relevant and difficult classes, getting the right internship/connections, etc to get the good/high prestige jobs.
Consulting jobs aren't easy to get either, and they work you to the bone so they have to pay good money to make up for it.
You are missing the point. I have worked in the tech industry and while you don’t make as much money as a physician, you start making six figures 2-3 years after getting your bachelors. In the meantime you are still making $60k+. As a physician you are going $60k+ a year in debt, then being paid what a software engineer makes right after college for another 3-7 years. That is 7-11 years of compound interest that you are losing. Even if you are making $300k a year, that’s a big loss, that takes many years to recoup. Is this a huge deal? No, but don’t be delusional that the income of a physician doesn’t come at a price unlike any other profession.
Tldr: don’t go into medicine for money
You are missing the point. I have worked in the tech industry and while you don’t make as much money as a physician, you start making six figures 2-3 years after getting your bachelors. In the meantime you are still making $60k+. As a physician you are going $60k+ a year in debt, then being paid what a software engineer makes right after college for another 3-7 years. That is 7-11 years of compound interest that you are losing. Even if you are making $300k a year, that’s a big loss, that takes many years to recoup. Is this a huge deal? No, but don’t be delusional that the income of a physician doesn’t come at a price unlike any other profession.
Tldr: don’t go into medicine for money
You're assuming everyone will have an insane amount of debt. I will leave medical school with around 65k in total debt. And I play to pay it all off during residency. I would beat that software guy.
Basically, are you saying that even these other "lucrative" professions like CS, and finance and stuff aren't necessarily better income-wise than medicine? Only the truly exceptional, best of the best types will be making the kind of money that doctors make? So basically, medicine is still one of the best ways of making a lot of money?
@Cornfed101 I didn't know you could make those fat stacks of cash working two years as a mechanical engineer in a medical software company. 🙂 Either that or you were an overcompensated junior dev who was making that six figure salary. You must have been a Slack demon taking tickets left and right.
@Cornfed101 Sorry it took so long for me to respond. I'm sft of software engineering, coding, and development being misrepresented as being an automated six figure experience after working 2-3 years in the industry. The people who qualify for positions like that as a hire at Google for L3 or Facebook for E4 (usually at 3-4 years of experience) positions have that salary with the connotation of Bay Area COL, RSU at grant value (value assumed upfront), and can actually perform at that competency and not get canned when it comes to review cycles.
Compensation for a junior developer at high five figures is a cost that FANG and software developer companies can afford in order to invest in talent growth without needing to be harsh post-6 months of initial hire. Junior devs are encouraged to fail and are nurtured by senior devs with the expectation that they will grow. I think it's an entirely different ball game to work as a mid to senior level developer, but have seen people who haven't worked as either writing about it as if it's a passive income process and does not involve any element that would be considered analogous to medical training / residency. I think that framing tech as naively being greener pastures is a gross inaccuracy, especially at salary level expectations to that of a physician on the same pay scale.
Do you think dentistry could lead to this path as well? Not sure if you're familiar with the state/future of dentistry.
Yeah, dentists (not associates) make 250-350k a year easy. Orthodontists and specialists make more.
But isn't living in a nice area an important thing to consider? I'm sure most people wouldn't want to live in rural areas, away from their family, friends, good school districts, accessible stores/clubs/activities, etc
Do you think that oversaturation in other places, that aren't the HUGE cities like NYC, won't a problem for the foreseeable future (at least 10 - 15 years)?