(09-16-2024, 08:36 PM)Duneranger Wrote:(09-16-2024, 02:38 PM)bjcheung77 Wrote: Yeah, I am thinking of it... for the last few years now actually... Here's an interesting read, the oldest Med School graduate (not in the US, but elsewhere). It's weird why he went to the PI to get a medical degree, I guess it's like some people going to the Caribbean for theirs...Decent chance you don't match into a US residency and then you are screwed. Foreign medical grads get the bottom of the barrel residencies if they even match at all. Why spend your remaining days being stressed 24/7 and having to deal with the risk of lawsuits and disgruntled patients all day long after burning 10+ years of your life studying. It's not weird he went to the PI, (it's cheap, with lower standards for admission) this guy would have no chance at a US med school and a Carribean school would take his cash and flunk him out after they collected his 100k a year check. They are notorious for this. Accepting tons of people then weeding them out after they take their money.
Link: https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/this-7...r-AA1qbkvM
Going into medicine or healthcare isn't just degree hacking a few more letters at the end of your name, you are dealing with people's lives and all the weight that comes with that daily.
Don't be like this guy if you value your sanity. Cool he achieved a goal, let's revisit his attitude a few years into practice.
I say this as a medical provider who has done this every day for 15 years. I get people want to check things off in life but this IMO is a weird way to do it.
Hello All,
Long time lurker, but had to register to comment on this. I know several people who went to Medical School in the Caribbean and matched into competitive programs in the US. A friend of a friend didn't match into a Derm program, so she worked as an assistant physician (this is different from physician assistant) under a doctor to get experience, applied again, and got accepted.
I have two associates currently enrolled in an online accredited Caribbean medical school where they will spend the first couple of years online, so they are studying from home.
I think it's unfair to assume that all Caribbean medical schools are predatory. Maybe it's biased but friends who went to a Caribbean schools say that most horror students you hear about students being dismissed is because they didn't do well in the program. They go to a Caribbean school thinking it will be easy, but then they realize it isn't. All the accredited schools need to maintain a standard to stay accredited, just like US medical schools.
I personally have no problem with anyone pursing a goal. If the guy in the OP doesn't end up pursing medicine, so what?