Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Maybe?

I may head to Tufts after four years at MSU, who knows.

http://www.tufts.edu/med/education/combinedmd/mdmafletcher.html

Health is a critical factor in creating and preserving socioeconomic stability and high levels of social welfare throughout the world, particularly in third world countries. Tufts University School of Medicine (TUSM) and The Fletcher School (FL) created its combined MD/MA degree program with the belief that individuals who are well-educated in both medicine and international affairs will be better able to plan, gain approval for, and implement effective health and medical care programs throughout the world.

By combining clinical training with an international diplomacy, language, and business perspective, the combined MD/Fletcher School MA program bridges the fields of international relations and medicine. The program is designed to produce well-rounded physicians who understand the principles of international law, politics, economics, and business.

Mindful of our global society, physicians equipped with The Fletcher School experience are better prepared to address global health problems and strive for a future in which clinicians, researchers, and diplomats focus on public health and its link to environmental conservation, democratic participation, economic stability, and gender equity.

Students bring a wide range of international work experience to the program and enrich the student body with their backgrounds in maternal health, disability support, and humanitarian agency programs. They strive to practice medicine, formulate policy, and collaborate with researchers, physicians, and diplomats on an international stage. They also understand the synergy between peace and justice and clinical medicine that economic, political, and social factors profoundly affect the health of populations throughout the world.

Graduates of the combined MD/Fletcher School MA program can pursue jobs in organizations such as the World Health Organization (WHO), the Ford Foundation, the UN, USAID, the U.S. Foreign Service, the World Bank, and other international agencies; they can also work in international companies such as ARAMCO or IBM. With their combined experience in medicine and international diplomacy, our graduates can work closely not only with other health professionals but also with diplomats, government officials, politicians, legislators, nonprofit managers, and business people who can influence and implement health-related programs worldwide.

They also have an MD/PhD Program. And that's all paid for, though I honestly don't know that I will have done enough medical-focused stuff in undergrad for them to let me in:

http://www.tufts.edu/sackler/mstp/

The Tufts University School of Medicine M.D./Ph.D. program is designed for students who want to pursue careers that include both research and clinical practice. Students receive rigorous scientific training in addition to full academic and clinical training in the practice of medicine. This training program enables students to bridge the disparate cultures of scientific investigation and clinical medicine. This program is supported by a Medical Scientist Training Program grant from the National Institutes of Health. All students receive full tuition scholarships and generous stipends throughout their training.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Whoa-very cool. Both programs--how will you choose??

Mom

Becca Farnum said...

Both? lol. Kidding! I like the MD/MA. I'd like it more if it paid me. But I'm having a lot of fun in chem lab right now. I think it will be a matter of how much I like the rest of my microbio classes...(I'm planning to absolutely loathe them, of course.)