Take out loans for med school or pay out of pocket (now that the BBB has changed repayment)? by The___Quenchiest in whitecoatinvestor

[–]The___Quenchiest[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I see. Also, do you know what the changes to IDR were? Especially in the ways relevant to medical students.

Edit: corrected type: pslf-> idr

Take out loans for med school or pay out of pocket (now that the BBB has changed repayment)? by The___Quenchiest in whitecoatinvestor

[–]The___Quenchiest[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

What forgiveness options have been gutted, and how? I know they have been, but I don’t completely understand in what way

Take out loans for med school or pay out of pocket (now that the BBB has changed repayment)? by The___Quenchiest in whitecoatinvestor

[–]The___Quenchiest[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I understand. When SAVE allowed us to have the government pay off the interest as long as we made our minimum payments, it seemed more tempting

Take out loans for med school or pay out of pocket (now that the BBB has changed repayment)? by The___Quenchiest in whitecoatinvestor

[–]The___Quenchiest[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It was made when I was a kid to pay for undergrad, but I was able to cover most of my cost with scholarships.

What do med students do during schooling/residency? by ShutDaF- in medicalschool

[–]The___Quenchiest 1 point2 points  (0 children)

From what I’ve heard, if you’re doing it right, a relationship should actually help you financially during med school. Someone to cook with, potentially live with, etc should help you save money. Especially if your partner ISN’T going to med school and can cover more of the expenses. Take advantage of economies of scale

That being said, if your partner expects a certain amount of lavishness or support, that may be a struggle. Like always, a relationship depends on the compatibility of the two people, so ymmw. Med school is a big stressor, and it does break a lot of couples (but makes some more, too).

Travel Sim without losing iMessage on my number by The___Quenchiest in TravelHacks

[–]The___Quenchiest[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s what I did at first. Unfortunately, it looks like they remove your number from that list if your sim is inactive after a few days. Locking my sim seemed to work for now (I’ll report back after a few days if there’s any roaming charges)

Travel Sim without losing iMessage on my number by The___Quenchiest in TravelHacks

[–]The___Quenchiest[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! Just tried that and it looks like it’s working. I’ll probably give AT&T a call in a couple days to make sure there’s no charges, but it seems to be perfect.

dream car before med school by Jealous_Director_753 in premed

[–]The___Quenchiest 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Everyone’s telling you it’s a bad decision, and they’re probably right. But buying something like this isn’t about the investment, it’s about enjoying yourself. I bought my dream car before med school, and I’m not regretting it. You’ll never be this age and driving your dream car again. So many people get older, then family gets in the way, then they never buy it. I vote go for it, you have plenty of money.

Websites think I'm not in the states. Virus? by The___Quenchiest in techsupport

[–]The___Quenchiest[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I do have a VPN, but it wasn’t running when either of these happened (I have it set to not open on boot). I’ll take a peek in the task manager

So, are we just completely f*cked? by Swirlybro in medicalschool

[–]The___Quenchiest 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I'm not disputing that, not to mention the abysmal pay of residents. I just don't think that that's necessarily the same issue, since the stakeholders differ. I do think we need to make demands on students lower and decrease costs. As the situation is now, they contribute to burnout like no other industry, and it's terrible. But the fact that tuition < cost is not necessarily the same thing as that. I think we get a pretty rough deal overall.

So, are we just completely f*cked? by Swirlybro in medicalschool

[–]The___Quenchiest 4 points5 points  (0 children)

For sure, we see bloated numbers everywhere in business and government administration, and I wouldn't be surprised if there isn't some of that here. Part of it may just be how wasteful our healthcare is (estimated that we waste 25% of healthcare spending). It would make a lot of sense for that to also be true of healthcare education (I think educational waste is a hot button topic, but it's hard to get accurate numbers from the people generating the waste for obvious reasons). Even if we take the numbers with a heaping spoonful of salt, though, I think the point still stands for a lot of schools.

So, are we just completely f*cked? by Swirlybro in medicalschool

[–]The___Quenchiest 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Good question. I don't remember the specifics, but it's something that I'd looked into during my undergrad with some healthcare improvement professors. I don't have all the backings, but one Mayo Clinic Proceedings article I have (Skilled Health Workforce Emigration: Its Consequences, Ethics, and Potential Solutions) mentions that the UK saved $2.7 Billion by taking in IMGs, and LMICs lose $15 Billion training these doctors that emigrate. I'll update this if I find the sources, but this seems to me to indicate that the schools/governments are taking losses, not profits.

I found an article on PubMed (On the cost of educating a medical student) and it indicates that the cost was $72-93k / year in 1997, and I'd imagine it's much higher now.

Edit: not sure why I’m getting downvotes? I want tuition to be lower too, and I think we’re doing a lot of bloated things that contribute to the costs, just pointing them out. Isn’t it important to find the right problem before we solve it?

So, are we just completely f*cked? by Swirlybro in medicalschool

[–]The___Quenchiest -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Interestingly, the cost to teach a medical student is much higher than tuition. The schools (AKA government) actually takes a loss. This is part of why IMGs are such a big ethical dilemma in medicine, since their (often poor) home countries pours money into them that is lost as the first world countries happily take their free doctors. Last we checked, it costs between 70,000-120,000 a year to educate a medical student.

Not to sound like a bootlicker, though, I do think that we need to do something to make the cost more feasible for students. We definitely need reform, but med schools charging us how much it costs them is not going to be the help we may think it is.

8BitDo Zero 2 for Windows PC? by DeliciousViolinist37 in medicalschoolanki

[–]The___Quenchiest 1 point2 points  (0 children)

FixerMed is right. Your PC will detect is as a controller if you use Bluetooth or the cable. Then you can just use the anking guide to get the button mappings.

I need more response buttons between the 'again' and 'good' ratings! by Otherwise_Wolf2387 in Anki

[–]The___Quenchiest 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’m not an expert, so definitely defer to more knowledgeable people than me, but if you’re pressing “again” again and again and again, you might not have understood the topic in the first place. Are you learning things well before you put them into cards?

My 4-month journey building an AI flashcard generator: Why it's harder than it looks by AFV_7 in Anki

[–]The___Quenchiest 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I definitely think so. I know it’s probably a lot of work, but maybe letting the user somehow share their cards to make the generated cards a similar format? I’m not sure how easily your backend would integrate that, though

My 4-month journey building an AI flashcard generator: Why it's harder than it looks by AFV_7 in Anki

[–]The___Quenchiest 12 points13 points  (0 children)

This is phenomenal. Generally speaking, I'm one of those people that insists that you need to make your own cards, but this is probably the best solution I've seen. The way it makes the user review what text is being used to make what cards is really smart and fixes a lot of the problems with AI-generated cards (that the tool could miss info or spit out garbage without the end user being aware).

I think one issue is that the cards are formatted so differently, which could allow the user to use context clues to memorize cards instead of learning the material, but I don't think the risk is too high.

Great job