Tulane MD/MPH?

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RL536

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Hi all --
Does anyone know a lot about the benefits of having an MPH in addition to an MD? Tulane's MD/MPH program looks pretty great, especially considering it's only a 4 year program and has the concentration in health systems administration. But, for the extra tuition, I remain unsure about the career payoff. Thoughts anybody?
 
I think it sort of depends on what you envision yourself doing with your medical degree in the future. An MPH will prepare you to impact health on a population or community scale, so if that is something that interests you, it would be something to consider. In my case, I want to do Infectious Disease, and at some point in my career I want to do HIV/AIDS management in South Africa. Education and advocacy are going to be an important part of what I do, so for me, an MPH would be very useful. I really like Tulane's program in particular, because they have a tropical medicine specialty.

But as you said, it is expensive, and time-consuming as well. If you think that you will spend your entire career treating individual patients, that is wonderful and completely fine -- and you won't need an MPH to do it. If you want to treat patients and also work to change local medical infrastructure, an MPH would be appropriate.
 
It would be appropriate, yes, but would it be necessary? In other words, will NOT having an MPH affect/limit my career chocies?
Thanks so much for your feedback!
 
I doubt not having an MPH will be a detriment to your career choices, unless you decide to go for a career path that is specifically public health oriented. I'm not expert on this, but I would imagine if you decided to work for your state dept. of health or something like that, an MPH would be much more necessary than if you were a doctor in private practice.
 
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