Quote:
Originally Posted by toeslayer
netizens
Always good to hear news of previous students who go on to achieve higher qualifications and further their career. Quite a few I know now have completed a medical degree and work as GPs. Interesting to chat to them about 'what if scenario', and most seem to regard progressing to podiatric surgeon as a less fulfilling pathway and consider their medical degree far more satisfying.
What say you?
toeslayer
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Unless Medicare and the health funds get on board, it is going to be an uphill battle for the generation 2 podiatric surgeons. Medicare even view the same anaethetist (working along side the pod surgeon and the orthopaedic surgeon) differently.
The public will be more confused with student coming out with a masters degree in a few years time at LTU. "Masters" is accepted by the lay person as having completed more than a basic degree. Traditionally, it has been the undergraduate 4 year course and clinical experience of a few years...and then post-graduate study.
And to make matters more confusing, we pods are allowed to use the prefix "Doctor", even though some of us have had as little as 3 years at university.
I know what you meant by Doctor and Podiatrist, but the lines are blurring unnecessarily.
Ron
Physiotherapist (Masters) & Podiatrist