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Med School Confidential: A Complete Guide to the Medical School Experience: By Students, for Students

Med School Confidential: A Complete Guide to the Medical School Experience: By Students, for Students
By Robert H. Miller, Dan Bissell M.D.

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Product Description

Med School Confidential uses the same chronological format and mentor-based system that have made Law School Confidential and Business School Confidential such treasured and popular guides. It takes the reader step-by-step through the entire med school process--from thinking about, applying to, and choosing a medical school and program, through the four-year curriculum, internships, residencies, and fellowships, to choosing a speciality and finding the perfect job.
With a foreword by Chair of the Admissions Committee at Dartmouth Medical School Harold M. Friedman, M.D., Med School Confidential provides what no other book currently does: a comprehensive, chronological account of the full medical school experience.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #19358 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-07-25
  • Released on: 2006-07-25
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 304 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Miller, author of Law School Confidential and Business School Confidential has teamed with Bissel, a doctor of emergency medicine, for the latest entry. A guide for readers thinking about attending medical school, or in the early stages of beginning an M.D., Miller and Bissell begin upbeat: "It's hard to argue with a career choice that allows you to save lives, or at least improve them every day." The arduous and complicated seven-to-ten year path they lay out, however, is another story. Reading the book straight through may do more to discourage readers than to help them on their way, but Miller and Bissell are clear and thorough, from undergraduate pre-med work to med school applications to grueling med school coursework to the various standardized tests, clinical duties and internships until, finally, the all-important career choice: where to spend your residency. Comments from several young practicing doctors ("Med School Confidential Mentors") don't illuminate much, and the authors can resort to banal generalizations that are little help: "The key is not knowing what you want to do, but what kind of person you want to become.". This book reveals very little of the personal, emotional journey of becoming a doctor, but as an overview of the academic rigors of the med student life, this guide is top-notch.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

About the Author

Robert H. Miller graduated from Yale University in 1993 and from the University of Pennsylvania Law School, where he was senior editor of the Law Review, in 1998. He is presently a trial lawyer at Sheehan, Phinney, Bass & Green in Manchester, New Hampshire, where he specializes in intellectual-property and commercial litigation. He is the author of the critically acclaimed grad school preparatory books Law School Confidential, Business School Confidential, and the hot new college preparatory book Campus Confidential.
 
Dan Bissell, M.D., graduated cum laude from Middlebury College in 1993 and from the University of Colorado School of Medicine as an Adler Scholar in 2002. He recently completed his residency in emergency medicine at the Maine Medical Center. During residency, he received the Gold Foundation Award as Resident Teacher of the Year and was appointed chief resident of the emergency medicine program. He is now in practice in Portland, Oregon.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter One 

Thinking About Med School?
Think Again . . .
 
Know thyself.
—Socrates
 
Choosing a vocation, particularly one like medicine, is a daunting task. Our social programming starts early in childhood, through role modeling, media portrayals, and questions like: “What do you want to be when you grow up?” Some people have an early, seemingly innately directed passion for a particular field that they pursue headlong from day one. For the rest of us, the path is more circuitous. Whatever your own course has been thus far, if you now find yourself contemplating a life in medicine, you must take the time to consider how it is that you got here.
 
Find a quiet place where you can be undisturbed for the next twenty minutes or so. Turn off your cell phone, your MP3 player, and anything else that can disturb you. We’re about to ask you a series of very serious questions, the answers to which will reveal much about your readiness for medical school. After reading each question, write in stream of consciousness, in the space provided, everything that comes to mind. Do not organize, filter, or censor your thoughts. And don’t worry about writing in the book! This book will be your tool and your guide through medical school and residency. Break it in and make it your own.
 
Get everything down on paper. You may be surprised at what you’re about to learn.
 
Take a deep breath and try to relax.
 
Ready?
 
Go.
 
The Four Questions to Ask to Assess
 
Your Readiness for Med School
 
1. How did you end up considering medical school?
 
2. Have you considered other career paths? Why or why not? Which other careers have you considered, and why did you abandon them?
 
3. What are your three primary motivations for pursuing a career in medicine?
 
4. What do you imagine a career in medicine would be like?
 
The amazing thing you’ll discover as you get deeper and deeper into a medical career is the great variety of answers to these seemingly basic questions. What is it that attracts people from all avenues of life, and all stages of life, to a field that involves such incredible sacrifice—a commitment of seven or more years of your life and an investment of hundreds of thousands of dollars? While it is impossible to catalogue all the reasons advocating for or against a career in medicine, there are some common threads that bear discussion.
 
The Top Five Reasons Not to Go for It
 
The easiest place to start is with some of the common myths and misconceptions that often drive people toward a career in medicine. Go back and look at your responses to the questions above. If any of the following reasons appear in your responses, you may want to more thoroughly examine your decision to explore medicine.
 
My parents were physicians
 
Family traditions are great, but if you’re contemplating med school just because someone else in your family is a doctor, think again! A career in medicine requires such deep personal commitment that the mere desire to carry on family tradition will pale in comparison. If you have physicians in your family and find yourself intrigued by their lives and careers, then by all means draw on them as resources, talk candidly with them about their experiences—and then reach your own conclusions. You’re charting your own course here, though, so make choices that work for you. If you’re getting pressure to pursue medicine from doctors in the family, ask them for an honest response to the question, “Would you do it all again if you knew you were going to start your career in medicine in the world as it is today?”
 
Remember, you’re the one who will be awake all night studying. If your motivations aren’t strong enough, you’ll likely end up unhappy.
 
The money and prestige
 
In general, physicians are well compensated for the demanding work they do. The days of your M.D. degree being a ticket to glory as the neighborhood millionaire, however, are clearly over. As a by-product of the current health-care crisis, physician salaries have stagnated and even dropped, despite increasing pressures, increasing costs, and diminishing rewards. If you choose a career in medicine, you will definitely be able to lead a comfortable life, and you will definitely be able to pay back your loans. But if your motivation for pursuing a career in medicine has more to do with a fancy car, a low handicap, and a beach house than it does with patient care, you might want to go back to the drawing board.
 
I can’t think of anything else to do
 
In deciding to go to medical school, you should be pursuing a chosen dream, not evading indecision. Pursuing a medical degree is not a casual undertaking, and anything less than your 100 percent commitment plus a complete knowledge and an understanding of your purpose for being there will likely cause you to falter somewhere along the way.
 
It’s okay to be concerned about the decision, to ponder it heavily, and it’s even completely appropriate, maybe even customary, to have some misgivings after you get started. Once medical school begins, however, indecisiveness about your overall commitment to medicine is at best disempowering and at worst crippling. As Ben notes, “The best advice I can give to someone thinking about medical school is to remember that medical training is a very intense (even brutal) eight-to-ten-year process during some of the prime years of your life. If you are excited about that, then go for it.”
 
You must seriously evaluate your options and your intentions in advance, so that if you choose to proceed you can do so with confidence. Even more important, you can articulate to yourself a thoughtful and convincing defense of your decision to pursue a career in medicine when the going gets tough.
 
The adrenaline rush
 
The practice of medicine has been described as “hours and hours of sheer boredom punctuated by moments of sheer terror.” This axiom certainly applies to medical school as well. If you have bought into Hollywood’s glorification of medical practice, though, be forewarned. Clinical practice can be exciting, and, yes, on a day-to-day basis you do manage to save lives, sometimes even in dramatic ways. But most of the days of your medical career will involve caring for the three-year-old with an ear infection, a ninety-year-old from the nursing home who is weak and dizzy, and the alcoholic with poorly controlled diabetes who has just vomited on you for the third time. It’s true that you will thrive on those cases that require quick, decisive action and get the adrenaline pumping, but your more gratifying work will often be the run-of-the-mill stuff that really involves you in people’s lives and allows you to connect with them and make a difference. In general, those who are addicted to the adrenaline rush and focus solely on that miss not only the elegant subtlety of the profession but also ultimately wind up unhappy and unfulfilled.
 
I want to help people
 
This one probably stopped you in your tracks.
 
You probably thought this was the reason you should be going to medical school, right?
 
Well truthfully, this is a noble reason for pursuing medicine. You should be aware, however, that there is a yawning chasm between the sentimental image that society has of doctors providing compassionate care for all in need and the practical realities of the resource-limited, highly politicized version of medicine actually practiced today. If you have an al


Customer Reviews

A road map through medical school5
Awesome Book! This book is part instruction manual and part personal account of the journey through the premed/med-school/residency world. It is everything you need to know and everything you were afraid to ask about what you are about to get into, or are into already. It is step by step from premedical programs to applications,and from "matching" to life after residency. The authors speak to real world issues of finances and family as well as the academics involved. I have just purchased a copy for my best friend on her way to her first year of medical school. No one contemplating, or even mildly interested in what it takes to prepare for and become a doctor should be without this book.

Great read for someone interested in med school5
I bought this book with the hopes that it could be of some insight as to whether or not med school would be for me. After reading it, I can say that it was that and much more. Not only did I get what seems to be an acurate portrayal of what it takes to get into med school and the road to being a doctor, but also extremely practical ideas and tools to help be successful on every major step along the way. The writing was clear and concise and seemed to be geared towards an extreme usefulness for a serious med student or potential med student. I will be applying for med school and reading this book along the way to help me excel through it. I definitely recommend this book to anyone seriously considering med school or who is in med school and would like some useful pointers on how to choose your clinical rotations, pre-pare well for the USMLEs, apply for residencies, etc.

Very informative!5
This book contained step by step procedures of all the components of getting into and surviving med school, residency, and a career. I loved this book, it gave me so much information that I didn't know before and is written in a very easy to read format. Great way to prepare for the years ahead of becoming a doctor.