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25stouring wrote:Pretty good advice here....I did both.....For much the same reason as posted just above, but if I had to do it over I would have just done med from the start....I can't think of any career where they would be synergistic hence no reason to really do both.
Also agree with the pros and cons above.....although in recent years the guaranteed job after doin med becoming less so....and if you do want to properly specialise, be prepared to have to leave trinidad for at least 5 years
Kewell35 wrote:25stouring wrote:Pretty good advice here....I did both.....For much the same reason as posted just above, but if I had to do it over I would have just done med from the start....I can't think of any career where they would be synergistic hence no reason to really do both.
Also agree with the pros and cons above.....although in recent years the guaranteed job after doin med becoming less so....and if you do want to properly specialise, be prepared to have to leave trinidad for at least 5 years
why you said you woulda done med from the start?
did med and currently thinking about doing engineering myself.
25stouring wrote:Nah I'm not Arnold .....but he seems like someone I shud know though. .... I also did elec.....graduated a while ago....
Victory_Specification wrote:Medicine is NO bed of roses. Get the monetary/ respect aspect out of your head. Telling you first hand the public likes to lay in wait for an opportunity to dis credit doctors, or an opportunity to prove you wrong in some way.
The reality is that you will work long hours from starting med school, up until you reach a consultant post (which will take YEARS). An on-call day is 16 hours long on a good day (don't even mention sleep), and you will get at least 2 of these every week.
You will look at your pay and feel you deserve more for the work/drama and frustration you have to go through for 90% of patients who will not thank you because it is your job to take care of them. You are always at risk of liability and this will forever play on your mind when you manage a patient. The studying does not end after med school - you might get away here and there but this is a profession where you are always called upon for your knowledge; either by your seniors, colleagues, patients, or in any given situation. Believe me, it hurts to not know something. This is a very hard job, you won't appreciate that until you start working. Forget what people say about it being 'about helping people', you don't need to be a doctor to help people - you do have to be one to treat disease.
If however you live for a challenge(because you will get one every day, mostly things you didn't learn in med school), you have no problem spending the rest of your life learning/reading, you have a lot of patience, losing yourself in your work is rewarding in itself, and you interact extremely well with people; then by all means you will do well in this game.
If you put learning secondary to money or ANYTHING else for that matter, forget it. Move along. CEO's of most national/multinational companies make at least 3 times more than doctors do in their lifetimes, and have more perks than we will ever get. Yes, there are poor doctors out there. Don't get swayed by the 'you will always have a job' malarkey either. I know multiple doctors that finished their internship in July last year that still don't have a job. It's going to be like that for a while (thanks GATE).
You probably want to know why I got into it/continue to stay in it. Very plainly: you will *never find a more interesting profession to pursue. For all the dramas you go through on a daily, there is an extreme satisfaction in knowing/applying the knowledge you work so hard to amass during your career. It's very similar to learning a new language, one where new words are added every hour of every day.
Don't be one of those morons who say 'Well ah get all A's, might as well do med'. You will regret it. Don't be fooled, other docs pick up on this very quickly.
But hey, don't take my word for it
S_2NR wrote:Pros money
Cons no life
but one year in either and all this bubbly ambition you have will be gone, guaranteed.
pj15 wrote:Anybody knows any of the 150 doctors who are/were unable to gain employment in the public health sector? What are they doing now? What non-clinical options exist in T&T for medical graduates??
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