<p>miss blue sky,</p>
<p>If you are having reservations about pursuing medicine right now, it's probably not for you. One needs 100% financial, emotional, spiritual commitment to the lifestyle. These are the bare minimum requirements. You can't just dabble with the idea of maybe this, maybe that, otherwise you'll fail in your pursuit. If you can't see yourself spending 100-120 hours being in class and studying every week during med-school, subsequently working the same amount of hours during residency, then you'd better rethink your career path.</p>
<p>Plenty of individuals change careers in their 30s, 40s, 50s deciding to pursue medicine and get accepted into a program. So it can be done if you decide to pursue it later. But statistically speaking, 30 and over non-traditional pre-meds don't do as well on the MCAT compared to students straight out of college or other counterparts still in their 20s. And older applicants, even if they have advanced degrees, don't get any special treatment from med-school admissions committees. Rather, they tend to get grilled, put through the ringer and are more closely scrutinized during interviews about their intentions to pursue medicine.</p>
<p>Here's an anecdote about me recently meeting a 40 year-old woman who just finished med-school in May and starting Internal Medicine residency at a hospital in NY. She graduated with a Biochem-English double major from UCLA, applied to med-school twice during and right after college, worked 4 years, subsequently earned a Masters in Nursing at Yale in 3 years , worked as nurse practioner for 4 years at Columbia Hosp. in NY, applied to med-school again at 35 and got accepted. She had a couple of kids while in med-school. I asked her if she had any doubts about her dream of becoming a physician. She said, "Oh plenty! But my husband, family and close friends were all very supportive. That really encouraged me to be persistent".</p>