'What if med didn't come with the supposedly bad-arsed salary?', in effect.
Good question. Take salary out of the equation and the only people left doing medicine would be the ones doing it for the prestige, the apparent high regard afforded to their 'Dr' status by society. Take prestige away, and a vast majority of them wouldn't even be there.
Doctor is an assumed title, and genuine doctors of [bleh] are misleading, or medical student's usage is erroneous - whoever cares, though.
If there really was an altruistic basis, the same students applying for medicine would also be applying for nursing. The vast majority of med students wouldn't be caught dead in the nursing profession if they hadn't made it into medicine.
Leekiss said:
I wonder if these people entering medicine purely for money/prestige realise how ewwww the profession can be. Smelling people's urine for diagnosis of infections, sticking your fingers up random places, patients/family members who abuse you. You can't even wear nice clothes to work because you just never know what might land on you.
You're being rather immature, ignorant, prudish, etc.
To bluntly put it, it's part of the job description; deal with it, or don't be there.
(And perhaps, don't be such a goddamned pussy.)
If you can't handle people, or the work, don't be a clinician/internalist; if you can't handle blood, have an unsteady hand, etc., don't be a surgeon; if that's neither of those are your thing or, simply put, you suck at them, become a diagnostic specialist (pathologist, hematologist, radiologist, clinical microbiologist, clinical neurophysiologist, etc.).
To answer, why not nursing; it's not a matter of assuming altruism or academia/wasted UAI, etc. In short, while there is an academic side to nursing, it's hella vocational in comparison to the medicine - medicine has more to do with the diagnosis of medical conditions and the treatments thereof, while nursing covers the patient's response to disease and treatments.
(Also, you can't specialize in nursing as you can in medicine; for example, psychiatrists
must be doctors, and surgeons must be doctors, too.)
Blahdy-crap about differences and similarities, etc.
tommykins said:
asians or ethnics might rip whites in academics but on a general plane they're richer than us.
Look at private schools, tommykins.
Realistically, shut the hell up about this racist crap; both sides of the argument.
iSplicer said:
I can easily derive your intellectual maturity by looking at your avatar and signature. Joke or not, you are responding to my idea with completely racist and irrelevant attacks. When I get my UAI, lets match ours up =)
If you sat your tests for all your HSC subjects in Yr2008, your UAI would be different if you sat it this year.
After like two months after the release of UAI's, no one really gives a shit about them; all that matters is course and uni, etc., but even then, if you like whatever the hell you're doing, good on you.
Newbie, you have a way to go.
... and they're trolling you. *mock horror* :O
Money, prestige, fame, status, powerz!1!, etc.; all superficial and vain reasons to undertake medical training.
Finance/commerce, certain engineering, business; that's where money's at, and it's repulsive.
Has anyone read the news lately?
Doctors & nurses have had to work with little supplies in the hospitals, essentials like gloves and drugs are all lacking because of the low funding provided. Many of the suppliers and doctors have all been out of pocket, the NSW health department is worse off then ever.
Well, ain't that dandy? Such is the state of New South Wales, and Australia, in general.
[Stuff...]
Did anyone mention the lines you have to wait while seeing a G.P? I would be dead already if I had a serious illness and even if I was first in line the doctor won't give you the anti-biotics prescription!
This is only the tip of the iceberg ladies and gentlemen, things will only get worse before they will get any better.
Good god!
Thanks for eliciting surprise, or not; and painting this cynical black-and-white picture.
Re: Thread title question; actually not that much (after ten+ years, a nice six-figure salary (not accounting super, and after tax, etc.)), or else they'd be a influx of doctors in Sydney's east and north.