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The path to becoming a doctor is a long and hard road. However, there are a number of compelling - and rewarding - reasons to make the journey.

Innumerable Benefits
Intimate Rapport

Being a physician gives you the most privileged listening post a human being can have. A doctor gets to hear the innermost issues of a patient and is privileged to weave those hints and facts into a diagnosis and treatment.

Unique Responsibility

Doctors are at the top of the "medical food chain." At the hospital level, physicians work on a team with the nurses, therapists, and residents who are taking care of the patient. The physician, however, has the voice that will carry the most weight and will be expected to make the difficult decisions.

Other Reasons

In a recent poll, physicians reported other elements that led them to the profession, among them:

  • continuing intellectual challenge
  • intelligent colleagues
  • joy of helping and taking care of people
  • respect of others in community
  • diversity of opportunities
  • opportunity to work with people
  • enjoyment of working with science or contributing to research
  • job autonomy and security
  • financial reward

Reasons to Reconsider
If you're applying to med school for any of the reasons listed below, you should examine your motivations before you take the plunge.

Parental Approval

Saying you want to be a doctor, even as a child, evokes pleased responses from adults. If you're someone who's always wanted to be a doctor, you might be able to remember how your goal was received early in life. Making your career decision early isn't necessarily bad, as long as you've progressed beyond the approval-seeking stage. You need to have a realistic sense of the profession and of why you want to be a doctor.

The Longest Path

Another faulty reason is the "difficulty of the path." It's sometimes the case that high achievers pursue a career in medicine simply because it's so competitive and involves such an arduous path. Though stick-to-itiveness and the discipline to accomplish a difficult goal are valuable assets in life and prized by admissions officers, they alone are not enough. The alchemy of desire and motivation has to precede the chemistry of mixing the right MCAT* scores, letters of recommendation, and extracurriculars. Real desire should be there.

Following in Footsteps

Many med school applicants are children of physicians. Though having a parent who practices medicine may indeed give you a sense of the field, be aware that your folks went to med school in a different era and attending med school and starting to practice medicine are now different in terms of greater competition and changing medical climate.

The Bottom Line
It's important that you can explain why medicine is your chosen profession.




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