undalay said:
lyk seriously:
a) i takes a huge chunk of ur life
b) it doesnt even pay THAT well
c) the huge competition means the majority will not rise in the hierarchy
d) its depressing to see people die all day
e)
Que?:
(a) I'm not sure what you mean by 'it takes a huge chunk of your life'. The training is long, sure, but you practice medicine as you train - it isn't a nebulous period where nothing happens. Residents and registrars look after a lot of the nuts and bolts of patient care (and they get reasonable pay while they do it). Are the hours long/ugly? Yes, in some areas, but not in others (think pathology, psychiatry, radiology). At a guess, based on surveys I have come across, the average might be 45 hours/week, which isn't that bad.
Anything you don't enjoy can seem like a 'wasted chunk' of life. If you don't enjoy it then don't do it.
(b) A good income is pretty much guaranteed (those who whinge are setting their sights too high IMO. Doctor's make more than enough to live a very comfortable lifestyle)
(c) If you mean academic medicine then it is correct that very few people become 'professor of X'. In terms of specialties, however, I am led to believe that most medical graduates do not become GPs. See page 40 (pdf page 55) of this
medical training review panel report - and note that while some training programs are longer the report has only included the 'advanced' stream of programs which have 'basic' and 'advanced' components, such as the college of surgeons and the college of physicians, and so the figures should roughly approximate the proportion in different specialties (Edit: This is a very sketchy approximation though... I should try to find something better at some point. GP is a great, well-paid job anyway. What's the fuss?).
I am somewhat unsure what you mean by 'hierarchy'.
(d) This varies by specialty, but yes, it is something you have to deal with. While death and disability are sad I find that things like babies and medical success stories help to counterbalance them. If you dislike death, don't enter palliative care. If you can't handle it at all, then certainly, choose another career path.