I concur wholeheartedly with Wooz. However, I can shed a bit of light on pharmacy as I'm doing it myself.
PROS
- Work/lifestyle factor--if you were looking for something more relaxing, pharmacy is not a bad choice, especially if you go into community pharmacy and own your own business, which leads to:
- Potential to make big bucks--medicine will make you comfortable, but if you want to really reap in any sort of big, big money, pharmacy's got potential
- Less training--four years plus one year registration as opposed to six years (minimum) plus at least 5 years of specialist training = 5 versus 11 years. If you want to marry and have kids, not saying it's impossible in medicine but you gotta carefully time it. When you get registered as a pharmacist, you'd be 23/24 which is still young.
CONS
- Lots and lots to memorise--medicine has even more though, but you are the expert on drugs. It is hard work, it is not simply a sub-counterpart to medicine.
- Work/play lifestyle while at uni--I find that med students are insanely involved in everything, probably because they get less contact hours than we pharm students. If you're really keen to get involved, like I am, you might find that the high number of contact hours gets in the way of quite a few things. It gets better as the years go by, but then you have placements for subjects, work commitments, and what not, just trust me it fills up quickly so there's not much space for life outside of pharmacy...
- People in pharmacy are boring--this is just a side note, I have found people in pharmacy to be very boring, and it is a small world. Don't let this influence your decision, but I thought I should just drop it in there that if you're expecting it to be like the quintessential uni stereotype of everyone has exciting lives and knows everyone around campus, and what not...it's not like that in pharmacy. We do have a few personalities, but not many, not the way Arts students do.
IN GENERAL:
You'll memorise more than you ever think you could possibly handle. Rattle off any brand name and I'll probably know what it is, at least by its generic name. It's a full-on degree, lots of hard work, but definitely doable. Anything else feel free to post up or PM me