Tuesday, May 2, 2017

5 Facts that nobody told you about medical school

There are a few things that could have been left out after you’ve pored over every publication about medical school. Here’s what you have to know:

  1. You will work harder then ever beforeThis may be the only real thing on here if this wasn’t a list. Your books may say medical school is tough in a couple of throwaway lines but you won’t really understand before you start. Even though you did well on the MCAT (which, by the way, can’t analyze for personal and professional characteristics vital to be successful as a doctor), medical school is an endurance test. Prepare to be in the top of your game.
  1. If you just want the money, you will be dissapointedIt’ll be off for a little while. Being a physician needs over 80 hours of work a week. You may work two weeks straight with no single day off. Now have a look at your paycheck. Considering how many hours you work, you might not be coming out ahead. In case you actually want to do that, you must truly have a passion for an insanely disciplined lifestyle and medicine.
  1. You will learn day after dayUnless you’re Tony Stark and have the power of being a super-genius, you won’t be an expert about the very first day of anything. Some will recommend which you spend the summer before your first year analyzing and preparing for medical school, but breaks will never be the same again once school starts. You’ll likely spend your summers preparing for the USMLE Steps or completing clinical rotations, so spend the summer before med school doing something for yourself. Journey. Relax. Enjoy these breaks while you can.
  1. You will get used to “having no emotions”Robots. They’re real. And they have realistic things to say when you talk to them. You’ll get to learn them pretty well because when you’re on campus, you’ll spend a lot of time at the simulation lab. Here you’ll work with all the newest medical simulators including Noelle Harvey, and SimMan 3G. Every one of the simulators includes patient interactions that are realistic to examine your medical abilities as well as your bedside manner.
  1. You won’t be sure why you even started medical schoolNo matter what profession you select, you will have these moments of uncertainty. No one ever said medical school was simple. They’re awful liars if they did. These moments are sure to come, but they’re additionally positive to pass and you’ll remember why you chose this path, if you’re ardent and determined. The journey to your MD might be rough but the destination may be worth it.

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