What I wish I knew before applying to medical school...
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What I wish I knew before applying to medical school...
Discuss training, careers, and education
Student BMJ and BMJ are constructing an e-book for prospective medical students. As thousands of applicants find out if they have a place or not at medical school later this month, we thought they mig
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Cat:BMJForum:CareersDiscussion:69b7fb42-db26-4977-a771-3b01639cdada
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What I wish I knew before applying to medical school...
posted at 5/1/2012 4:14 PM GMT
on bmj.com
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Re: What I wish I knew before applying to medical school...
posted at 5/1/2012 4:38 PM GMT
on bmj.com
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Re: What I wish I knew before applying to medical school...
posted at 5/1/2012 6:53 PM GMT
on bmj.com
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Posts: 340
First: 12/7/2010 Last: 24/5/2013 |
Know this: · When it comes to brains vs. hard work, the latter will take you a long way. You don’t need to be a genius to survive medical school, but you definitely have to be a hard worker (in other words, if you happen to be a Burke and not a Yang, you are going to do just fine). So the question is: Are you ready to work like a rented mule for 4 years? · If you love A and B, one of which is Medicine, you need to find a way to combine them both if you simply cannot live without them. This was the case for me; I wanted to be a writer (matters of the chordae tendineae) but I also wanted to be a doctor (matters of the prefrontal cortex). I then looked at it objectively and realized that I can be a doctor and a writer and not vice versa, to get into that sweet spot of living in both worlds. If you think it is possible for you, then it probably is. This is what you’ll be doing for the rest of your life; so you should choose carefully. It’s more important in Medicine than anywhere else because this really isn’t about you once you commit yourself; it is about the lives that pass through your hands. Nothing is worse than seeing a doctor who practices because s/he was forced into it. It’s unacceptable if you continue to remain conflicted. It’s admirable if you manage to choose squarely with confidence. · Don’t choose medicine only for that pseudo-ka-ching factor. You’ll be waiting a long time, and missing out on: life. Also, if you are too picky, then you’ll suffer. In the preclinical years, you’ll be fed really interesting subjects with intermittent rubbish that are seemingly about as relevant to medicine as your neighbor’s overweight hamster. You need to devise methods to get past the boredom so that you can live to see the other side. It “ain’t all rainbows and sunshine”! Now, you have been warned! |
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Re: What I wish I knew before applying to medical school...
posted at 5/1/2012 6:58 PM GMT
on bmj.com
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Posts: 340
First: 12/7/2010 Last: 24/5/2013 |
· Gather attitudes prior to medical school: do your research online (Student BMJ, doc2doc, The Lancet Student, The Student Doctor network, Medscape Students, the works), interview doctors while you shadow them, talk to medical students/interns. Of course, their word isn’t final but if you ask a lot, you’ll probably get a rough picture of the truth. Use your senses; do you see yourself in the ward? Can you handle the sight of blood or the smell of the sputum from a patient with bronchiectasis? Try the A&E if you need a quick rethink; that place is highly specific and sensitive in deciding whether you can brave it or not (many a medic have been traumatized senseless because they skipped this part. We have a few zombies here in medical school, and you will too). · Tell yourself that your grades and the general extra-curricular will have you lost amidst the pile of applicants who are just as qualified. You need to do something more to stand out. Perhaps an interesting hobby that could potentially extrapolate into the medical field? Start early though. · I’ve recently realized that one’s overall experience in medical school is either like an ejection systolic murmur with its crescendo and decrescendo over the 4 years, or an early diastolic. The mid-diastolic kinds are a little rare (the hard worker I mentioned above is the obvious pansystolic!). It’s great to be all revved up like an energizer bunny for medical school but you need to accept certain f-a-c-t-s: that there will be times when things don’t go your way; socially, academically and personally. Acknowledging the possibility makes the actual event less traumatizing but does not make things easier. Medicine is not only about books and clinical skills; there’s this whole other psychological dimension that nobody is ever really prepared for: the medical personalities, the emotional toll, the friends, the pressure to be a certain way because that’s how you saw yourself for a long time. The earlier you step away from your perceptual blind spot, the better! |
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Re: What I wish I knew before applying to medical school...
posted at 7/1/2012 1:41 PM GMT
on bmj.com
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Re: What I wish I knew before applying to medical school...
posted at 7/1/2012 7:32 PM GMT
on bmj.com
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Re: What I wish I knew before applying to medical school...
posted at 8/1/2012 1:31 AM GMT
on bmj.com
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Re: What I wish I knew before applying to medical school...
posted at 8/1/2012 4:57 AM GMT
on bmj.com
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Re: What I wish I knew before applying to medical school...
posted at 13/1/2012 6:00 PM GMT
on bmj.com
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Posts: 2
First: 8/1/2012 Last: 13/1/2012 |
Hi, l'm in yr12. l would like to know how you went about finding the right work experience. l'm new to this country and not yet very familiar with the system. |
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Re: What I wish I knew before applying to medical school...
posted at 13/1/2012 8:49 PM GMT
on bmj.com
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