Anonymous wrote:Niece is a junior at a top-20 SLAC on a pre-med track. She had a rough start and her GPA is 3.5 overall, biology major. Her father is a Harvard educated doctor and they always talk of her following in his footsteps. I don’t think her GPA is competitive and she may do better trying for a PA program. Anyone in similar situation? Is 3.5 too low for respectable MD programs?
Anonymous wrote:OP. Yes, he will do a better job supporting her if he has all the relevant information. He is “old school” but he’s practical (he’s footing all the tuition bills!) about education and the world of medicine.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did your niece ASK for your advice????
OP. No she did not. I am just anticipating she may not become an MD. I will support her in whatever she does.
But really that's her dad's job.
He needs to be the one to support her in whatever she does or she will always feel like she let him down.
I am torn between advising my niece to pull up GPA to a 4.0 going forward and devoting her life to the MCAT or seeing her lower her sights to a PA program or even a bridge to medical school like the Georgetown one. I’m getting a lot of good info. here. Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a physician who has taught NPs, I think being a PA/NP is a perfectly fine profession as long as you accept that there are some limits to your authority and what you can do. Just the fact that PAs are fighting to change their name from physician assistant to physician associate says a lot
Do doctors look down on PAs?
They don't consider them equal but doctors don't say it. I don't think NPs see themselves "equal" to doctors to be honest.
OP. Yes, he will do a better job supporting her if he has all the relevant information. He is “old school” but he’s practical (he’s footing all the tuition bills!) about education and the world of medicine.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did your niece ASK for your advice????
OP. No she did not. I am just anticipating she may not become an MD. I will support her in whatever she does.
But really that's her dad's job.
He needs to be the one to support her in whatever she does or she will always feel like she let him down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did your niece ASK for your advice????
OP. No she did not. I am just anticipating she may not become an MD. I will support her in whatever she does.
Anonymous wrote:I've had bad experiences with PAs...I feel like nurse practitioners are better trained.
Anonymous wrote:I've had bad experiences with PAs...I feel like nurse practitioners are better trained.
That’s terrible!Anonymous wrote:PAs dangerously misdiagnosed me or almost killed me and/or my kid on several separate occasions. No thanks, it’s just a way to save $ not to improve health care you get
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a physician who has taught NPs, I think being a PA/NP is a perfectly fine profession as long as you accept that there are some limits to your authority and what you can do. Just the fact that PAs are fighting to change their name from physician assistant to physician associate says a lot
Do doctors look down on PAs?
They don't consider them equal but doctors don't say it. I don't think NPs see themselves "equal" to doctors to be honest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She does not want to do a PA program.
She needs to get an A in every class from here on out, prepare to do as well as possible on the MCAT, and then if she does not get in to med school, she should do an A&P grad program like this one, and then apply again. https://smp.georgetown.edu/
I work at Georgetown's med school, and each class has many grads from that program.
She can also look into applying to some Carribean med schools. It is true that folks who attend school there don't have the easiest time matching and don't get the respect of their peers who attend med school in the US -- but they get a hell of a lot more respect than PAs do.
PA programs aren't really something to just go into anyway, they are really for people who have worked in the medical field and want the responsibility and respect and pay they deserve but won't get with out the PA degree.
People knowledgeable in the training of healthcare workers would respect a PA trained in the US over someone with a medical degree from the Caribbean. It would be clear that they weren’t able to get into a medical school so they went to the Caribbean. PAs usually choose their route because they want to go into medicine without the longer hours and responsibilities of the medical doctor.
Anonymous wrote:Niece is a junior at a top-20 SLAC on a pre-med track. She had a rough start and her GPA is 3.5 overall, biology major. Her father is a Harvard educated doctor and they always talk of her following in his footsteps. I don’t think her GPA is competitive and she may do better trying for a PA program. Anyone in similar situation? Is 3.5 too low for respectable MD programs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a physician who has taught NPs, I think being a PA/NP is a perfectly fine profession as long as you accept that there are some limits to your authority and what you can do. Just the fact that PAs are fighting to change their name from physician assistant to physician associate says a lot
Do doctors look down on PAs?