Message from @Pacific_Twist

Discord ID: 521034899810025503


2018-12-08 18:29:10 UTC  

in medical you do about 20 things and procedures 100% of the time

2018-12-08 18:31:31 UTC  

tends to get very repetitive and the one time you get something weird its too rare for you to recognise it anyway so you send the patient to someone else qualified in their 20 repetitive things plus its very binding to the state and you are but a worker in the hospital so you have to personally do your work and depend on employer for life.

2018-12-08 18:33:23 UTC  

AND there is a new developing branch in law based arround patients suing doctors

2018-12-08 18:35:31 UTC  

and there is always the option of catching something from a patient

2018-12-08 18:36:25 UTC  

so unless you have a burning and everlasting desire to save people who are not high on the iq scale who can always sue you and transfer to you their plague id recommend the trades

2018-12-08 18:41:02 UTC  

@Pacific_Twist I work in systems engineering/devops in technology and I love it but I too always felt torn between medicine (surgeon) and engineering. I think it comes down to - do you want to save lives in an operational role or do you want to build/create systems? Now, you could build medical software/hardware as an engineer, too, and inadvertently heal people. Writing software that makes doctors more efficient is my end goal and MAYBE that will scale better than a career as a doctor. I never had that burning desire to heal people but it was always in the back of my mind. I may have made the wrong choice but I will keep going down this path since I have my BS and 6 years experience in the field by 2020.

2018-12-08 18:42:06 UTC  

I agree with @Commanda Knuckel about medicine from the little experience I have. I shadowed nurses, ER and doctors only twice in my life but I have 2 nursing friends and one physician assistant friend who decided it's not worth the time/energy/financial cost of more school.

2018-12-08 18:43:21 UTC  

Biomedical engineering is viable but it's very niche and from what I've heard requires a masters to really be seen as hirable since it's market is smaller. A mechanical/software engineer who also works in medicine would give you a wider market for your skills.

2018-12-08 18:43:34 UTC  

Biomedical/medical is also extremely female-dominated.

2018-12-08 18:44:13 UTC  

and i just say to my artist colleagues that i learned my body proportions and anatomy from medical šŸ˜„

2018-12-08 18:44:26 UTC  

That's awesome šŸ˜‰

2018-12-08 18:44:37 UTC  

How much schooling did you go through before cutting losses @Commanda Knuckel?

2018-12-08 18:44:41 UTC  

Or are you still in it?

2018-12-08 18:44:45 UTC  

still in

2018-12-08 18:44:51 UTC  

What is your end goal?

2018-12-08 18:45:06 UTC  

Surgery has been the only medicine to appeal to me. I may be a sociopath.

2018-12-08 18:45:35 UTC  

I know this is controversial but outside surgery I don't value doctors very much haha. Most everything else is behavioral after that.

2018-12-08 18:45:50 UTC  

I agree. The thing is Iā€™m a medic in the military and being a doctor was about research for me. The prospect of getting sued or ā€œattemptingā€ to heal is something that seems futile. As in, providing care to someone and letting them know itā€™s there diet or lifestyle thatā€™s causing this but all theyā€™d want are pills.

2018-12-08 18:45:52 UTC  

there is a sanatorium thingie 100m from my house in the forest where i have my greenhouse, beehives and hotel šŸ˜„

2018-12-08 18:46:18 UTC  

@Commanda Knuckel Oh that is cool!

2018-12-08 18:46:40 UTC  

For sure surgery. Docs are aces at plugging, closing, and mending.

2018-12-08 18:46:48 UTC  

End goal...

2018-12-08 18:46:59 UTC  

@Pacific_Twist Thank you for your service!

2018-12-08 18:47:10 UTC  

Good shit. I'm glad we're of similar mind to that.

2018-12-08 18:47:18 UTC  

I keep thinking genetics/AI (machine learning) Iā€™m just not sure on the viability of it

2018-12-08 18:47:27 UTC  

I still think about going to school to become a surgeon lol.

2018-12-08 18:47:37 UTC  

my professors offer me to teach me but i was an artist before medicine and i will be one after it

2018-12-08 18:47:53 UTC  

šŸ¤™šŸ¼ np I did it to heal and provide care to people defending my country.

2018-12-08 18:48:10 UTC  

Honestly, I suggest starting online courses for free in statistics, probability, linear algebra, python, R, machine learning and then try to solve kaggle problems.

2018-12-08 18:48:24 UTC  

Hmm

2018-12-08 18:48:28 UTC  

@Commanda Knuckel What will your day job be?

2018-12-08 18:48:40 UTC  

doc

2018-12-08 18:48:46 UTC  

@Pacific_Twist As a medic, becoming a surgeon would make the most sense if you really felt like it.

2018-12-08 18:48:48 UTC  
2018-12-08 18:49:03 UTC  

@Pacific_Twist You can try programming and machine learning for free to see if you like it.

2018-12-08 18:49:15 UTC  

Machine learning / genetics will be less building and more analysis, as well.

2018-12-08 18:49:43 UTC  

You'll be gathering data, ingesting it, cleaning it, making models and applying the data to the models and communicating what you find.

2018-12-08 18:50:06 UTC  

Makes sense.

2018-12-08 18:50:47 UTC  

Market-wise; surgeon is obviously best but ML engineer in whatever industry you desire (genetics) is definitely good too. You'll want a BS/MS in Computer Science if you want to be senior level. You could go with just BS but it will be harder to make 250k+ at FAANG type companies.

2018-12-08 18:50:52 UTC  

I expected as much and thatā€™s honestly what Iā€™m looking for. Thereā€™s so many applications for AI. 3D printing is getting more advanced with metal printers

2018-12-08 18:51:04 UTC  

Plus bio printing