mermaidblue: (Default)
mermaidblue ([personal profile] mermaidblue) wrote2006-01-06 02:25 pm
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Medical Hurdles

For [livejournal.com profile] dwivian or others who want to understand the path of medical training:

Phase 1- College, 4 yrs, usually a science major

Phase 2- Medical School, 4 yrs +/- research. When you are done with this you are officially a doctor but still need on the job training.

Phase 3- Internship. You first job as a "real doctor". A year of on the job training at a major university hospital. For some specialties this is a medicine year followed by residency while for others it is just your first year of residency (the latter is for pediatrics).

Phase 3 cont- Residency. Between 2 and 8 years of more specialized training. 2 more years for pediatrics. When this stage is done you take your specialty board exams and get your liscense to practice one type of medicine.

Possible Phase 4-Fellowship. Further taining in a more specialized area of your chosen field for instance emergency medicine or cardiology.

Attending- the name we call anyone who has finished thir training however far they chose to take it and has a liscense. They can teach medical students and residents, and may do research.

[identity profile] mermaidblue.livejournal.com 2006-01-06 09:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Yup, that's where I am. I am getting paid something right now but not much per hour. I have a bit over 100 thousand in educational debt which for a doctor is actually pretty low. When you are an attending you earn more.
dwivian: (Default)

[personal profile] dwivian 2006-01-06 09:26 pm (UTC)(link)
a hundred grand is LOW!?!?!?!?!

Okay, maybe my copay isn't such a big deal, now.....

How much longer before you're "attending"?