About going into med school for grad studies

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<p>The general consensus is no, medical and pharmacy schools do not care where you went to undergrad. It’s about ten thousand times more important what you’ve accomplished at your undergrad than where you went. </p>

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<p>You could do a fellowship or a PhD in any of those fields after completing a MD; however most individuals working in pharmacology, epidemiology or toxicology pursue their field thru a PhD rather than a MD. </p>

<p>Pharmacology is graduate program (PhD, or a Pharm D+ post grad fellowship). Individual interested in pursuing pharmacology as a career are recommended to major in chemistry, biochemistry, neuroscience (if you want to do neuropharmacology), chemical engineering, microbiology or something similar.</p>

<p><a href=“The Difference in the Ph.D. Degree Vs. the Pharm.D. Degree | Education - Seattle PI”>http://education.seattlepi.com/difference-phd-degree-vs-pharmd-degree-3338.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>Toxicology is either a graduate degree program (MS or PhD), or a post-doctoral fellowship area of specialization (which means you do 1-2 years additional study after completing a MD, DVM, or PharmD). I actually work at a biomedical research lab that specializes in toxicology. There are all sorts of subfields of toxicology that are highly specialized.</p>

<p>To become a toxicologist, individuals typically major in biology, microbiology, chemistry, biochemistry, biophysics or something similar.</p>

<p>Epidemiology is a graduate degree (MS, MPH or PhD). Epidemiology uses statistical methods to track the heatlh and disease patterns in large groups of people. It’s very analytical and requires a excellent math background. Applied math, computer or information science, and statistics are often recommended majors for those interested in pursuing epidemiology.</p>

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<p>That’s because if you really want to work in any of these areas you really need a graduate degree. An undergrad degree in any of these fields will get you a job as low level lab tech without much/any chance for advancement. You can get the same sort of job with a plain vanilla bio, chem, biochem degree. (We hire toxicology lab techs with bio degrees all the time.)</p>

<p>You’ll have many more options regarding your future if you major in something less specialized. That way as you get to be junior/senior in college, then you can decide what you want to do and whether or not you whether or not you want to pursue a higher degree. </p>

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<p>Sure, but your advisors at the university will often advise you to go elsewhere for your graduate training. (Academic institutions in general like to see their grads go elsewhere to prevent academic inbreeding. Every school, every dept has its strengths and weaknesses and they want their students to get a fuller, more rounded exposure/training in the field.)</p>

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<p>Yes. To get a license to practice as a pharmacist, you must complete a PharmD (Doctor of Pharmacy). There are some combined BA/PharmD programs that will allow you to complete both degrees in 6 or 7 years.</p>

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<p>Just like med school, pharm school has a strict set of pre-reqs, a standardized entrance exam (PCAT) and expectations for EC activities like shadowing a pharmacist and volunteering at a pharmacy.</p>

<p>You don’t need to have a pre-pharm intention, but you do need to fulfill admission requirements.</p>

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<p>Yes and no. </p>

<p>Yes, you just need to complete the pre-reqs and take the PCAT to apply for pharmacy school.</p>

<p>And no, the pre-reqs for pharmacy school are not the same as pre-reqs for medical school. They’re slightly different.</p>