sikeveo said:
Get over it. . I have nothing against UTS, but i know nothing about it. As goes with UWS.
I know a reasonable amount about unsw/usyd med sci and gave my opinion based on what i know. No need to call me ignorant.
Ok I couldn't read the rest of the thread past this post, so sorry if someone's already brought it up, but do you even know what
ignorant means?
Ignorance is the trait of lacking certain knowledge (or, in another context, education). So in reality, what you've just said is precisely what I said: you are ignorant.
Edit: OK Alvin's very next post clarified, damn. Still, I was right!
Regarding ethics tutes and communication etc...I haven't been so good with those. I mean, I know my shit but it's not quite the same if I'm watching anime or playing gameboy during the FRS eh?
And to the thread creator, do you want a primarily scientific role (your pathology/immunology), a pastoral role (caring for people) or both? Also, do you want to be "running the show" or are you content to take a more "team member" role? Do you want a high turnover of patients/clients or do you want to keep seeing the same people over time?
If you want a more scientific than pastoral role, BMedSc with research and/or lab tech work is your thing. Labwork all day, every day, processing cultures and looking at slides.
If you want a balance between scientific and pastoral, I'm afraid you're looking at the doctoring and it's not easy. The others have already gone into that. Even then, pathology has virtually no (live) patient contact, and immunology is limited. Immunologists do have a few "repeat customers" though, kids with chronic atopia and things. This path puts you in the driver's seat, since we all know that doctors still run the show.
Leaning more to the pastoral side is nursing. Now nurses aren't just about short skirts and huge tits, they actually have to learn a lot of scientific stuff and do a lot of procedural work (cannulation, drawing blood etc). They look after the needs of the patient as a person more than as a specimen, but don't give the orders. Depending on where you choose to work, you can have high patient turnover (such as in a surgical ward at hospital) or you can look after the same people for years (nursing home). Depending on how high you qualify (EN, RN, NP etc) you could just be wiping arse or you could be medicating, supervising long-term care and doing other doctory-type stuff. Nurses don't do any labwork though.
Anyway, hope this is useful. Good luck with your decisions.