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Reason to pursue a PhD (Part 1) PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 08 June 2010 00:46

If you want to do research, you don't even need a MD or a PhD or an MD/PhD for that matter.  You have to be creative, be tenacious and hardworking, and be logical and methodical.  The first two traits are possessed by all scientists whether they are successful or not.  However, to be successful as a scientists your thinking translated into your research must be logical and methodical. What I am talking about is a processes of doing science that is taught.

 

The training of a scientist is very much like an apprenticeship.  Unlike crafting a fine wrist watch or making the perfect scotch, the apprenticeship you receive from your P.I. (primary investigator) teaches you the fine art of crafting experiments and writing a scientific manuscript. These are very time intensive processes that can only be learned from a patient mentor.  Without this intensive teaching experience, it is very rare for one to learn the skills necessary to produce good research that will be recognized by the scientific community.

 

One would say that you can always learn this from your one year research elective during your MD clinical fellowship.  However, I would argue that one year (or even 2 years for that matter) is not enough to complete a research project from scratch and see it to completion as a published manuscript.  The process of getting research published is very time consuming and you have to factor in months of rebuttal letters between you and the reviewers, as well as doing experiments to appease the reviewers who will always ask for more and never less. This back-and-forth process is also very much an educational experience and part of life as a scientist, and clinical fellows often find themselves to caught up with clinical duties that they leave it to their sponsoring lab to write the rebuttal letter and complete the requested experiments.

 

Furthermore, even as a clinician doing research during that fellowship year, you will find yourself having to attend clinics (although less frequently than if you weren't doing your research component of your fellowship) and clinical conferences.  When do you have time to sit down at the bench and not have to worry about patients and clinical obligations?  Will you find time to attend basic science seminars in immunology, cell biology, and biochemistry? The beauty of the PhD is that it is a protected length of time where your only worry is about your experiments.  You will also have time to go to seminars where you can learn how scientists present their research in logical manner and learn new techniques.  Who knows? You may even stumble upon a new technique that may be applicable to your research.

 

I'll add more thoughts later on why one needs a PhD.

 

 
MD/PhD Admissions Statistics from AAMC PDF Print E-mail
Sunday, 21 March 2010 06:21

Did you know that American Association of Medical Colleges has statistics for MD/PhD matriculants?

 

Quick facts:

60.3%/39.7% Male:Female Applicant Ratio

1703 applicants for MD/PhD programs in 2009 but only 816 were actually accepted.

On average applicants have a 3.54 Science GPA, 9.7 Verbal, 10.4 Physical Sciences, and 10.9 on Biological Sciences.

For those that were accepted and matriculated into the program, the average science GPA is 3.71, 10.7 Verbal, 11.6 Physical Sciences, and 12 Biological Sciences.

 

You should check them out their website and view the statistics yourself.

 

AAMC MD/PhD Data

 

 

 
MD/PhD Blogs PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 22 January 2010 19:35

There are two great MD/PhD blogs on the internet.  Although they are not updated frequently, they do contain a wealth of information on what it is like to be in an MD/PhD program.  Also provides a lot of commentary on interviewing for residencies as an MD/PhD.  I would highly suggest you go through these blogs if you are considering applying for an MD/PhD program or if you wanted to know more about what the program entails.  I do find some posts very entertaining.  Overall, each blog posting is well written.

  1. MudPhudder
  2. MudPhud Adventures - Hasn't been updated since June 2009.

 
Costs associated with interviews and Tips for saving money PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 31 December 2009 00:00

Great, you just heard back from a dozen schools who offered you an interview.  Now the tough part is deciding which programs you are willing to go interview.  Keep in mind there are costs associated with traveling to  interviews.

  1. Flights
  2. Hotels/Motels
  3. Ground Transportation/Taxi/Rental Car
  4. Food
If you can afford to go to all your interviews, then go for it.  But if you are interviewing with a budget, try these money saving tips:
  1. Group your interviews together by geographical location.  If you are going to interview in New York City and you live in Los Angeles, contact the school to see if they are flexible enough to schedule your interviews close together so you don't have to fly back and forth.
  2. Ask the medical school to see if they have a medical student-applicant host program.  Many medical students volunteer to host applicants.
  3. Ask hotels if they have a free shuttle service to/from airport and to/from medical school interview.

Last Updated on Friday, 01 January 2010 06:17
 
Check to see if MDPhD program reimburses you on expenses PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 02 November 2009 08:05

Traveling to interviews is the most expensive part of the MD/PhD application process. Unless you are in New England where there is a large cluster of MD/PhD programs, you'll have to do a fair bit of traveling to interview with MDPhD programs on both sides of the coast. Most MDPhD programs view you as a potential graduate student and so they take their recruitment process seriously and treat you like the PhD only applicants.  That being said, PhD only applicants are often reimbursed for travel expenses since the pool of graduate applicants are much smaller than MD applicants, and thus the competition from graduate schools to recruit the best young minds is fierce.

 

So before you book that interview trip. Check with the program first to find out what their policy is on reimbursing for travel expenses.   Schools like University of Iowa and Mayo Clinic will provide free hotel accommodations and flights.  NYU provided hotel accommodations.  More competitive PhD programs may offer nothing at all since they feel you will bend over backwards so you can attend their university and join their MDPhD program.

 
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