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That's exactly what made me go from pre-med to pre-dental. Residency is actually closer to 4 - 5 years though, not 3. And the medical community is thinking of increasing that, too. Not to mention, the only good medical professions are extremely competitive anyway, so **** that.I have been pre-med for most of college, however not for any particular reason...I just kinda "was". At this point, I have realized that I am not passionate about medicine, however basically all my skills and experience and background revolve around some sort of job in the healthcare field. I do like healthcare very much, I just don't particularly care for medicine, which is why I don't really want to do 4 years of med school, then 3 years of residency for a job that will make me stressed with no time for hobbies, family, or a "life".
I'm someone who just graduated from college last May, I have a 3.70 GPA with considerable volunteering and leadership. I'm anticipating to apply to a graduate school for the next cycle (so apply June of 2020, I am taking two gap years).
I have been pre-med for most of college, however not for any particular reason...I just kinda "was". At this point, I have realized that I am not passionate about medicine, however basically all my skills and experience and background revolve around some sort of job in the healthcare field. I do like healthcare very much, I just don't particularly care for medicine, which is why I don't really want to do 4 years of med school, then 3 years of residency for a job that will make me stressed with no time for hobbies, family, or a "life".
Dentistry is becoming more and more appealing to me, and if I do commit to it, I have lots and lots of time to take the DAT, and shadow some more. However, the dentists I've shadowed thus far I am not sure they paint an accurate representation of what dentistry will be like in MY future (6 years from now, then onwards from there).
The amount of massive debt scares me; there's only one in-state school for me, and so if I don't go there I can expect to pay almost 400k likely for loans (I'm expecting to do 350ish total for tuition and living expenses at my in-state). I am now hearing more and more how it's becoming harder for dentists to make a very high salary, especially with corporate dentistry. If I'm planning on living in a major metropolitan area (Northern Virginia, 40 min from Washington DC), is dentistry not that financially lucrative? Is it true that it's becoming harder and harder to open up clinics?
I will say that ideally I will be living at home for free for a while after dental school to pay off all my loans, however long that takes. Because I have that option, will dentistry be a good, rewarding career financially (can I expect to get close to a physician salary?) And will dentistry continue to have a nice "lifestyle"?
Compare that to all the other medical doctor professions.How is residency closer to 3-4 years? Internal medicine, typical for most, is 3 years period.
IDK about that one chief. I think 300k+ is the norm now or at least becoming the norm.Don’t go to dental school if you have to take out 300k+ debt
Why not live at home and work full time for two years? Your GPA is fine so you don't need grad school, and you could easily save $60k+. If you get into your state school, this could knock your total cost to less than $300k which is manageable. If you don't get into your state school, you'll at least have some work experience under your belt and decent savings.I'm anticipating to apply to a graduate school for the next cycle (so apply June of 2020, I am taking two gap years)
I'm someone who just graduated from college last May, I have a 3.70 GPA with considerable volunteering and leadership. I'm anticipating to apply to a graduate school for the next cycle (so apply June of 2020, I am taking two gap years).
I have been pre-med for most of college, however not for any particular reason...I just kinda "was". At this point, I have realized that I am not passionate about medicine, however basically all my skills and experience and background revolve around some sort of job in the healthcare field. I do like healthcare very much, I just don't particularly care for medicine, which is why I don't really want to do 4 years of med school, then 3 years of residency for a job that will make me stressed with no time for hobbies, family, or a "life".
Dentistry is becoming more and more appealing to me, and if I do commit to it, I have lots and lots of time to take the DAT, and shadow some more. However, the dentists I've shadowed thus far I am not sure they paint an accurate representation of what dentistry will be like in MY future (6 years from now, then onwards from there).
The amount of massive debt scares me; there's only one in-state school for me, and so if I don't go there I can expect to pay almost 400k likely for loans (I'm expecting to do 350ish total for tuition and living expenses at my in-state). I am now hearing more and more how it's becoming harder for dentists to make a very high salary, especially with corporate dentistry. If I'm planning on living in a major metropolitan area (Northern Virginia, 40 min from Washington DC), is dentistry not that financially lucrative? Is it true that it's becoming harder and harder to open up clinics?
I will say that ideally, I will be living at home for free for a while after dental school to pay off all my loans, however long that takes. Because I have that option, will dentistry be a good, rewarding career financially (can I expect to get close to a physician salary?) And will dentistry continue to have a nice "lifestyle"?
What would your master's be in? Real work experience is often much more valuable than a degree.But if I were to give up graduate school, what professions could I look to get into with the biology degree that will lead to the kind of lifestyle/finances I want?
????
OMFS is the highest $/hour in any field of medicine. Pulling 4 wisdom teeth is a 40 min case and you pocket easily over $1k. Only 15 minutes of this case requires your attention because the other 25 is allocated to coming into/coming out of anesthesia. You can do 7 of these cases easily in a day and thats $10k if you also include consults, other procedures, followups, etc. Do the math from there on how much you want to work per week. Plz explain how cardiac/general surgery is "always better" than this?
I ran the numbers in another thread using MGMA and ADA numbers, and Oral Surgery $/hr was better than any medical specialty except for Mohs Surgery (fellowship after Dermatology). It was on par with Neurosurgery and Ortho Spine Surgery. These are arguably the most competitive specialties/subspecialties in all of medicine and dentistry.
CT surgeons make less than Neuro or Spine Surgeons but they work about the same amount of hrs on average. From the med forums it seems Interventional Cards is pushing out CT Surgeons. Wires > Surgery for a patient right?
If your goal is to make a lot of raw money, then medicine is probably your best bet. A decent amount of surgical sub specialties pushing 700k average, but you will be working 60-70 hrs+ a week for it.
Dentistry offers better work life balance but raw income will never match medicine. $/hr yeah it's on par, but $/hr won't pay off your student loans.
OMFS wins in many more categories than $/hr lol. But yeah I doubt many of these guys/gals will have a hard time paying back their loans.