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Paying for Medical School

From Student Doctor Network Wiki

6.1) How expensive is medical school?

 Very. According to the AAMC's Medical School Admissions
 Requirements, the range of tuition and student fees for 1996-1997
 first-year students was:

Range Median Mean

  Private, Resident:     8,152-31,925   24,925     23,835
  Private, Nonresident: 16,403-31,925   25,224     25,407
  Public, Resident:      2,908-20,129    9,107      9,921
  Public, Nonresident:  10,680-51,669   21,129     22,153
 Keep in mind that these figures represent only tuition and
 fees. Other expenses include room and board, books, equipment,
 transportation, insurance, and personal expenses.  In all, these
 additional expenses can easily be up to $15,000 per year.

6.2) How can I pay for medical school?

 The first consideration is to reduce your expenses.  The less
 expensive schools tend to be public schools within your state.  If
 you don't have a medical school in your state, you may be eligible
 to attend other state schools as an in-state resident through an
 exchange program such as WICHE, the Western Interstate Commission
 for Higher Education, which allows students from Alaska, Montana,
 and Wyoming to apply to and attend any western medical school as a
 state resident (with the exception of the University of Washington).
 Another major expense that can be reduced, if you qualify, is the
 cost of application.  Be sure to apply for an AMCAS fee waiver (if
 you qualify), which can save you hundreds of dollars.
 Unfortunately, reducing expenses still leaves, in most cases, tens
 of thousands of dollars to pay.  The most common way to pay this is
 via loans, particularly federal Stafford loans and private
 alternative loan programs.  While some Stafford loans may be
 subsidized (the government will pay the interest while you are in
 school), there is a limit to the amount you can borrow.  Other loan
 programs are often offered by the various schools.
 Grant aid (aid you don't have to repay) is not common.  Most schools
 offer a minimal amount of merit- and/or need-based grant aid.  There
 are also two programs that will cover the entire cost of school plus
 give you a stipend.  The first, the Medical Scientist Training
 Program, is a highly competitive government-subsidized program
 designed to recruit students interested in earning both an M.D. and
 a Ph.D.  The second, the Uniformed Services University of the Health
 Sciences, is the military's medical school.  In return for years of
 service to the military, your education is paid for in addition to
 your receiving a commission in the military and the concomitant
 salary and benefits.
 Another possibility for covering your expenses is to obligate
 yourself to later service.  Two examples of this type of program are
 the Armed Forces HPSP and the Public Health Service program, both of
 which provide payment for medical school in return for a commitment
 to serve in either the military or in underserved public health
 regions, respectively.
 Finally, be sure to search the Web and other sources for private
 scholarship sources.  You may be eligible for free money or favorable
 loans due to your extracurricular activities, ethnicity, religion,
 heritage, or any number of other factors.  Your school's financial aid
 office will be happy to suggest sources to you as well as discuss means
 of payment.

6.3) Can you tell me about Armed Forces scholarships?

 The Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program (HPSP) is a
 scholarship between two to four years in length offered to students
 in schools of medicine, osteopathic medicine, dentistry,optometry,
 clinical or counseling psychology, and vetrinary medicine.  HPSP
 students receive full tuition, school-related expenses, and a 
 stipend as benefits.  The stipend is currently (as of 7/08)
 approximately $1,900/month, paid in two parts on the 1st and 15th
 days on each month by direct deposit.  Expenses are reimbursed by
 the submission on an itemized form with receipts and a signed
 approval letter from your school stating that the expenses you claim
 are reasonable ones for your curriculum; typically, most texts and
 equipment (i.e., stethoscopes, lab coats) are paid without any fuss.
 Tuition is paid directly to your school.
 Basic requirements for the HPSP are that you are a U.S. citizen and
 meet the qualifications for commissioning as a military officer.
 There is an application and interview process which takes place at
 about the same time as med school apps.  (Of course, you do have to
 actually get into med school in order to receive it.)  The HPSP is
 offered through the Navy, Army, and Air Force (the Marine Corps is
 part of the Department of the Navy and is served by Naval docs, and
 the Coast Guard is staffed by docs from the Public Health Service).
 In return, you owe as many years of service to the military as you
 received in support.  Residency does not count towards this payback
 time.  What you actually wind up doing, of course, varies according
 to your specialty; there isn't a huge need for pediatric
 neurosurgery about the average aircraft carrier, for example.
 What are the advantages to this little Faustian bargain?  Well, for
 starters, there are the financial benefits.  The more frugal
 students will emerge from med school debt-free, and those who live a
 little higher on the hog will owe relatively small student loans.
 Salary during residency is about $20,000/yr greater in the military
 (in the neighborhood of $60,000 for interns, $70,000 for more senior
 residents).  Even post-residency, you won't starve; average
 attending salaries vary by specialty, rank, and years of service,
 but most wind up in the neighborhood of $100,000/yr as junior
 attendings (typically O-4 in rank: a lieutenant commander in the
 Navy, a major in the other two).  You are automatically commissioned
 as an O-1 while a med student (ensign in the Navy, 2nd lieutenant in
 the other two) and are promoted to O-3 on graduation
 (lieutenant/captain).  There are some pretty entertaining places to
 work in the military that you might not the chance to work near in
 the future: Europe, Asia, and so forth.  And of course, medicine is
 medicine: patients can be much the same no matter where you work,
 and in any case the majority of patients in the military system are
 not actually active duty troops but retirees and dependents.
 Benefits can be nice as well: 30 days paid vacation each year, no
 overhead, and full medical/dental coverage.
 Military residencies, by the way, are generally quite good.  When
 considering your training site come application time, you do want to
 think about issues like patient volume, didactics, and so forth,
 just as in any residency, but board pass rates for military
 residency grads have been uniformly excellent, and people have
 gotten into fine fellowships with minimal difficulty.
 (Incidentally, if you do a civilian fellowship as an active duty
 officer, the military will still pay you as an attending.  Which is
 pretty sweet.)
 Now for the downside.  You are sacrificing a few years of your life,
 in a sense.  Although a flexible mindset and a willingness to
 compromise will help you get a good posting, not everyone in the
 Navy gets to go to Italy or San Diego.  Internship and residency are
 relatively separate entities and require separate applications, not
 only for fields like anesthesia but even for fields with categorical
 internships like internal medicine or general surgery.  Not only
 that, there is a risk that you will have to spend a couple of years
 away from training between your R-1 and R-2 years as a general
 medical officer, or GMO.  This risk is greatest in the Navy overall
 but present in the Air Force; it is also greater if you
 plan on pursuing a more specialized field like neurosurgery or
 anesthesia.  Medicine, peds, and family med residents are more
 likely to complete their training uninterrupted.  GMO tours vary
 between one to three years in length.  The Army no longer utilizes
 GMO tours, except in rare cases where an exception is requested.
 (A brief proviso on the whole GMO thing.  An anesthesiology
 attending at the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda spent
 three years as the medical officer aboard the USS Belknap in the
 Mediterranean, and he loved it.  After finishing his tour, he went
 on to his residency at Mass General.  So it's not the kiss of death.
 Also, GMOs are a dying breed.  The DoD is currently working out a
 plan to abolish GMOs and staff those positions with
 residency-trained docs.  So stay tuned.)
 The military is a startlingly bureaucratic organization which has
 little ways of reminding you that it is, in fact, a branch of the
 federal government.  For physicians, though, military medicine is
 actually not really different than working for a good HMO.  Research
 in military medicine is quite impressive, incidentally, although its
 work is often very practical in orientation.  There are good
 research ties with the NIH and CDC, and most residencies are very
 supportive of research (and may in fact require it of residents).
 There are a certain number of people each year in the HPSP who defer
 their commitment in order to do civilian residencies.  The exact
 number varies depending on the year, the specialty, and the needs of
 the service.  If you want to defer, it helps to have a good reason
 (i.e., spouse's job) and to not be rude (e.g., "I want to defer
 because military residencies are inferior").
 If you want to postpone the decision about military service, there
 is a financial assistance program (FAP) available to residents in
 most specialties, wherein you get about $30,000/yr on top of your
 civilian salary to repay loans (or buy a new car, possibly) in
 exchange for an equivalent number of years of service.

6.4) Can you tell me about Public Health Service scholarships?

 The Public Health Service offers a scholarship (The National Health
 Service Corps, <http://bphc.hrsa.gov/nhsc/>) paying full tuition,
 books, and supplies, and a monthly stipend, with the following
 requirements:
  1) You must enter a primary care-type of residency (medicine,
  family med, peds) or at least something that's close (OB/GYN,
  psych), or a residency combining two of the above fields.  A main
  limitation is that the residency not take more than 3 or 4 years.
  After serving your commitment you can undergo further medical
  training (i.e., fellowships).
  
  2) You must serve one year in a federally-designated underserved
  area of your choice for each year the NHSC paid your tuition
  (minimum two years), be it an inner city (30% of sites) or a rural
  cow town (70% of sites).
  3) As of December 1998, the IRS has deemed ALL parts of the NHSC
  scholarship as taxable, including tuition.  So, if you go to a
  school that costs $28,000 per year, taxes will leave you with about
  $350 from your monthly $950 stipend.  The NHSC has been trying to
  get Congress to reverse the IRS's reading of the law, but to no
  avail as of yet.
 There are similar programs available through various state
 governments and the Indian Health Service, some funded by the NHSC.
 Physicians who have completed training in a primary care field are
 eligible for Public Health Service positions, with opportunities for
 loan repayment.  Some feel that this may be a better choice, as you
 are not locked into a primary care field without first going through
 your medical school rotations.  See the NHSC web site for more
 information.

6.5) Can I really borrow more than $10K/yr in Unsubsidized

    Stafford Loans?
 With the phaseout of the HEAL program at all schools, the Department
 of Education has now authorized increased unsubsidized Stafford loan
 limits for Health Professions Students.  This limit is now $30K/yr.
 The Student Financial Aid Handbook section detailing these limits
 may be found at:
 <http://ifap.ed.gov/sfahandbooks/attachments/0102Vol8Ch3loanperiodamts.pdf>.

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This page has been accessed 4,164 times. This page was last modified 19:12, 29 November 2008. Content is available under Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 .


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