Yes source please.Source plz.
Unless if my aunty and cousins are both EXTREME outliers.
First year maybe 36k (still doubt it).
As for a GP making less than $100/day.
4 patients a day?
My GP gets about 4 patients in 30 minutes!
Yes source please.Source plz.
There is an urban legend, recently repeated on Seinfeld, that dentists have the highest suicide rate of any profession. This is false.oh yay highest suicide rate of any profession ^^
Interviews weed out most social retards.p.s. don't become a doctor if you're a) foreign as fuck, b) can't communicate, c) have no grasp of the english language outside of writing the essays you need to get the uai and d) you're socially inept. you'll make a shit doctor and all your patients will mock you and all the good doctors will laugh at you.
not really hey, it isn't hard to know the answers the interviewers are looking for, was it uqld that dumped the interviews because they were sick of everyone coming in with the 'perfect' answers?Interviews weed out most social retards.
It's a bit higher than that. From the last AMSA intern/residents guide intern salaries varied between 47k (Vic) and 55k (Queensland). This is probably for a 40hr working week (or something like a 76hr fortnight). Overtime is often along the lines of 1.5x for the first two hours, and 2x for further hours. Similarly, rates are increased for overnight shift work and weekends.around 40k for interns.. first year and, increases progressively from year / experience
yes i was referring to 1st year averages, they do rise sharply with experience. partner is a different story - you do work long and hard to get there.Lawyers with a 36k a year average? thats ludicrous! the average salary for a lawyer fresh out of law school is in the mid forties and progressively increases from there. you are looking at an average of 150K a year for the profession as a whole and 300K+ a year if you make partner. Just an example , my uncle is currently a partner at a law firm in america ( Watchell, lipton et al) and he is earning 2.7million a year. But that is one of the largest law firm in america and he has hideous hours of work everyweek. he appears to love his work though
it was more like they dumped it coz they couldn't afford it.. LOLnot really hey, it isn't hard to know the answers the interviewers are looking for, was it uqld that dumped the interviews because they were sick of everyone coming in with the 'perfect' answers?
While your concerns are very valid, please do not generalise - not all medical students are in it for the money or the prestige. In fact, most medical students don't earn very much just after they graduate and don't earn the big bucks until after they specialise, which takes about eleven to fifteen years of solid education. A lot of hard work and perseverance.It's a shame that most, if not all students who want to be a doctor, are infact simply lured by high income and prestige. But they show to their school authorities just the opposite, that they want to serve the comminuty.
In school, they pretend they are compassionate, caring and very helpful towards thier fellow students and overall community. They use all tactics to become students leaders and pretend to be very helpful just to get a vote...simply to have their school give them a good report. All this as it is so tough to get into medicine and this extra bonus (of their being a helpful human being) may go a long way in getting admission.
See, if one is actually a very kind person, then it is a different thing. But I have come across my fellow students who have no idea about any kindness whatsoever. They just love freaking out and don't even have maturity to know what medicine or kindness/empathy is all about. But they want to be a doctor.
If doctors were to earn lesser money in coming times, then no one would care to be kind to poor and sick. It's all for money and status after all. A time will come (or will it?) when this cycle breaks and people do not run after money
A vast majority of them do.While your concerns are very valid, please do not generalise - not all medical students are in it for the money or the prestige.
It would be arrogant to claim that medical graduates “don’t earn very much” when medical graduate salaries are clearly and significantly above the Australian average wage. There are far worse graduate salaries out there. Speaking of 'big bucks', are you saying that medical graduates only consider their salary as "big bucks" only when they're receiving the average medical specialist remuneration? Do they consider themselves earning unsatisfactorily "not very much" up to that point?In fact, most medical students don't earn very much just after they graduate and don't earn the big bucks until after they specialise, which takes about eleven to fifteen years of solid education
Yes there are gems out there. They’re gems because they are far and few between.I there are some gems out there that should not be victimised by your generalisations
It’s hypocritical to speak of altruism when you were just talking about a graduate salary of $50-$65k being not very much.Being a doctor is a job - yes it's quite an altruistic one
It's not a genuine consolation when they're kicking back with their 6 figure salary while they're lamenting about their career choices...If it's any consolation to you, those doing medical studies for prestige and high income (and there are a fair few) will ultimately realise that they made a mistake and find themselves having spent years doing something they never really had a passion for.
You’re missing the point – the com law students are at least honest about their pursuits. They’re not doing it in the guise of “altruism” while receiving a range of (at the very least) above the Australian average wage to the highly obscene 6 or 7 figure salaries.However I don't think your assumptions are fair, at all. If you're going to target medical students based on this, then you should target the commerce law students who are obviously in it for the money that will come when they enter a giant banking firm like Morgan Stanley.