Assuming multiple acceptances, should happiness be number one? Prestige? Cost? Location? "Fit"?
It really depends on the schools, you might be able to get better advice if you say the schools that you're deciding betweenWould most people have found it worth it to pay an extra 20k a year for a school they liked better than just the cheapest one? What is the difference in your monthly loan payment for a school thats 30k versus 50 or 60k?
@aldol16 wins this thread ladies and gentlemen. Mods can close it now because there won't be a better answer than this.Whether you're going to get laid in the city you're going to be in.
How attractive your classmates are
Combine these two for best resultsWhether you're going to get laid
Combine these two for best results
So only patients then?One should never lay with one's classmates 😛 After undergrad, that's no longer kosher.
Thank God im not Jewish! ................ but i do mess with jewish girlsOne should never lay with one's classmates 😛 After undergrad, that's no longer kosher.
Haha this thread is quickly devolving, y'all gonna get thread-specific banned 😛
we got an ochem master and a baller over here it seems😎😉They could ban me, but then the world will never get to see my completed MDapplicants profile. Wouldn't that be a shame? 😛
Helpful thanksLocation, Fit, Cost, Presitge in that order.
n=1
Whether you're going to get laid in the city you're going to be in.
I have great news! There's a med school opening in Las Vegas!How do you know if you will get laid in the city you're in? I'm looking for a school where this will be possible because I didn't get laid in college, and I think that establishing emotional intimacy will be a great part of achieving happiness.
Whether you're going to get laid in the city you're going to be in.
I'm basically a dad.
- More than half of all people will have an STD/STI at some point in their lifetime.1
- Recent estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Infection show that there are 19.7 million new STIs every year in the U.S.2
- In 2008, there were an estimated 110 million prevalent STIs among women and men in the U.S.. Of these, more than 20% (22.1 million) were among women and men aged 15 to 24 years.2
- The total estimated direct cost of STIs annually in the U.S. is $15.6 billion (2010 US dollars).3
- In a national survey of US physicians, fewer than one-third routinely screened patients for STDs/STIs.4
- Each year, one in four teens contracts an STD/STI.5
- One in two sexually active persons will contract an STD/STI by age 25.6
- About half of all new STDs/STIs in 2000 occurred among youth ages 15 to 24.7 The total estimated costs of these nine million new cases of these STDs/STIs was $6.5 billion, with HIV and human papillomavirus (HPV) accounting for 90% of the total burden.8
- Of the STDs/STIs that are diagnosed, only some (gonorrhea, syphilis, chlamydia, hepatitis A and B) are required to be reported to state health departments and the CDC.
- One out of 20 people in the United States will get infected with hepatitis B (HBV) some time during their lives.9 Hepatitis B is 100 times more infectious than HIV.10
- Approximately half of HBV infections are transmitted sexually.11 HBV is linked to chronic liver disease, including cirrhosis and liver cancer.
- It is estimated that as many as one in five Americans have genital herpes, a lifelong (but manageable) infection, yet up to 90 percent of those with herpes are unaware they have it.12
- With more than 50 million adults in the US with genital herpes and up to 776,000 new infections each year, some estimates suggest that by 2025 up to 40% of all men and half of all women could be infected.13, 14, 15
- Over 14 million people acquire HPV each year16,and by age 50, at least 80 percent of women will have acquired genital HPV infection.23 Most people with HPV do not develop symptoms.
- Each year, there are almost 3 million new cases of chlamydia, many of which are in adolescents and young adults.7
- About two-thirds of young females believe doctors routinely screen teens for chlamydia.17 However, in 2003 only 30% of women 25 and under with commercial health care plans and 45% in Medicaid plans were screened for chlamydia.18
- At least 15 percent of all American women who are infertile can attribute it to tubal damage caused by pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), the result of an untreated STD. Consistent condom use reduces the risk of recurrent PID and related complications: significantly, women who reported regular use of condoms in one study were 60 percent less likely to become infertile.19
- Consistent condom use provides substantial protection against the acquisition of many STDs, including statistically significant reduction of risk against HIV, chlamydia, gonorrhea, herpes, and syphilis.20, 21, 22
worth.
- scary STDs
- It is estimated that as many as one in five Americans have genital herpes, a lifelong (but manageable) infection, yet up to 90 percent of those with herpes are unaware they have it.12
- With more than 50 million adults in the US with genital herpes and up to 776,000 new infections each year, some estimates suggest that by 2025 up to 40% of all men and half of all women could be infected.13, 14, 15
Given my age, unlikely. 😉Whether you're going to get laid in the city you're going to be in.
I've never had a cold sore 😎One shouldn't cite these statistics without some qualifying statements. First, one reason why we're such a sexually backward society is because we stigmatize everything related to sex. At one extreme is the gay men and AIDS "hypothesis." We've thankfully moved away from that, but think about why STIs are stigmatized. For example, why do people feel more uncomfortable going to the doctor for an STI as opposed to a bacterial infection? Chlamydia is a bacterial infection. So is strep. Why is one more stigmatized than the other? We shouldn't contribute to the stigmatization of STIs. Sex is a normal part of life.
I cited these exact examples because of how misleading these numbers are. It shows how you can take statistics and put whatever spin you want on it. At first glance, this is concerning because it seems like a herpes epidemic. But now think about it. Do you understand herpes? Have you ever had a cold sore in your life? A cold sore is the herpes virus - it's HSV-1. Most people don't stigmatize cold sores. It's a part of life and over half of the U.S. is thought to have been exposed to it at some time (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK47447/). HSV-2 is the one known colloquially as genital herpes. But did you know that you can spread HSV-1 to someone else's genitals and somebody else can also spread HSV-2 to your mouth? 9/10 people worldwide are thought to have one form of the virus. Ask yourself - why is there a stigma when the virus expresses itself on the genitals but not when it expresses itself on the mouth?
I hear ya. I'm 22 already. Basically a shell of my former self.Given my age, unlikely. 😉
Given my age, unlikely. 😉
Physically able to be his mother 😉Emmanuel Macron.
My son is older than you 😛I hear ya. I'm 22 already. Basically a shell of my former self.
Age is just a number 😉My son is older than you 😛
Until that "age" has a coronary infarction while prone 🤣Age is just a number 😉
True storyUntil that "age" has a coronary infarction while prone 🤣
Bill Clinton would disagreeUntil that "age" has a coronary infarction while prone 🤣
Until that "age" has a coronary infarction while prone 🤣
@aldol16 - just read his Wiki.. he married a woman 20 years his senior! danggggg.
Fight through the painWell that certainly limits your time spent on prone activities.
Haven't we all had a crush on a teacher at some point?His former teacher, actually. Who left her husband for him. Talk about dreams come true.