Anonymous wrote:I'd rather see the money go to low paying professions like teachers, police officers and social workers who have much less earning potential.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they are so great, why not extend it to all students in all study programs.
New physicians today are routinely graduating with $300,000 in med school debt, making it difficult for them to enter less lucrative areas of medicine like primary care or research at universities or places like the NIH. NYU is known as a research med school, so the donation probably would most benefit the latter.
NYU med students still will have to pay the cost of living in NYC for four years, so there would still be debt to pay for funding that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they are so great, why not extend it to all students in all study programs.
New physicians today are routinely graduating with $300,000 in med school debt, making it difficult for them to enter less lucrative areas of medicine like primary care or research at universities or places like the NIH. NYU is known as a research med school, so the donation probably would most benefit the latter.
NYU med students still will have to pay the cost of living in NYC for four years, so there would still be debt to pay for funding that.
Anonymous wrote:If they are so great, why not extend it to all students in all study programs.
Anonymous wrote:This just means that the costs will be off-loaded to other students. Nothing in life is free. Someone else always has to pay for the freebies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder if this includes all of the foreign students who go there...if not it;s great for the 10% of american students.
Around 16% of the student body is foreign. So American students are 84% not 10% of the student body.
Anonymous wrote:Great idea. I heard it on the radio today too.
It got me to thinking about general practitioners in general. Does it make sense to phase them out in favor of Nurse Practitioners? My GP does nothing special - nothing a good Nurser Practitioner couldn't do. If I have more serious problems, I know to go to a specialist.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if this includes all of the foreign students who go there...if not it;s great for the 10% of american students.