GOOD QUESTION! So I wanted to start a thread on this and tell my story.
17 years RN then decided finally to go to medschool at 41 years old,
Middle aged crises maybe! But certainly something I wanted to do for some time. You see I was married the first time I wanted to go and my first wife told me NO when I was only 34, she said that I could not go and enjoy myself at medschool while she worked. So I tried to make things work but that is just a small example of how bad the marriage was and we divorced a few years later, I continued on thinking I would never go, met someone new and remarried then I kinda told her one day I still had this need to be a Doctor, expecting the worse, She said sure sounds like fun for both of us.
So I then did the "mapping out" and applied and was accepted at a stateside college at the age of 39 for a MS in nursing with more premed reqs still to finish, then the dreaded 7 to 10 year rules of how old my courses hit me and the MCAT dread and how long I may struggle with a full time job and College and getting accepted, Heck I saw a long painful road for me and thought I would be 45 or older by the time I could even get accepted in the states. SO I thought what would I like to the most in Medicine? Rural FP came to mind, I was seeing patients as a Hospice Nurse in Rural Georgia and loved it so I was hooked.
So I applied and was accepted offshore and now will graduate medschool at the age of 45.
now comes the money.
By the time I graduate I will have 180,000 in loans but I know there are ways for Rural FP to get some tuition pay back on loans due to going to practice in needy areas, and the south has many needy areas, in fact southern Rural Ga. is one area ( thats where I have a job waiting for me now) so I think I can get almost half or more payed back through this, so I'm told, but if I do not get payed back this is my math from what I made before and will make:
before age 45 grad from Medschool, 3 years residency so out at 48 plus 20 years = 68 years old
made around 50k a year as a Hospice nurse for 20 years = 1 million
lets just say 200k as a FP ( been offered higher for the job already)
200k for 20 years = 4 million so the difference is 3 million more as a Doc and if I do have to pay back my loan 100% lets take out 250k of the 3 million thats still 2.75 million more than not going to medical school, wow thats still makes it worth it in my book!
This does not take into account malpractice but my arrangement will be that I do not have to pay for malpractice since it will be a group practice.
Retirement was pushed up to 70 in recent years so I do not see 68 as unreasonable.
SO what do you think?
Please feel free to post your story or thoughts!



