I recently read (in the NYT I believe) about this new program at Mount Sinai where they accept students with liberal arts degrees, i.e. no MCAT's, no orgo, etc. Admittedly, it's an extremely selective program... but then again you can't go back in time anyway, so I might as well go all out 🙂
I always wanted to go to med school and can handle the hard sciences but didn't want to spend 4 years doing only that and THEN med school... too much science for me. I liked the idea of a broader liberal arts education, but knew either I would have to spend significantly longer taking additional pre-req's after I finished, so I decided to go the psychology route.
Now I'm in a PhD program studying behavioral medicine, specifically cardiovascular disease, so I kind of feel like I've gotten the best of both worlds (minus the pay part).
As far as the pay goes, though, I think we're in a good place personally. The field of psychology, particularly my focus area in psychology, is a burgeoning science that has a lot more to add to medicine than the field of psychiatry (in its purest form). I can see how psychologists are becoming increasingly recognized as just as PART of the medical field instead of their own field entirely. And it's possible, maybe 20 or 30 years down the road (or perhaps less depending on how the health care reform pans out) that pay will start to equalize. This is especially true because I already hear discussion of reform for physician pay because specialists make astronomically more than GP's and that's just not sustainable. So, it looks bleak now... but I think there's definitely hope for reform in the future.