Originally posted by Lexicographer
GradMed is pretty good anyway, and it seems to be a superior course to the old UNSW one (haven't quite read up on the new one yet so can't compare).
Perhaps, but that's the old one
Look up the PBL-based UNSW course (now running), and see what you think. There's a fair bit of info on it on
http://newmedprogram.med.unsw.edu.au/.
Originally posted by Lexicographer
J-Belle, have you thought of your intended specialisation? I myself am have had an eye on Psychiatry for a few years now...
Well I'm only really looking at psychiatry and clinical psychology (because the mind/brain is so much more interesting to me than the rest of the body). My decision has to be whether to complete the med course + psychiatry (surprisingly hardly anyone in med wants to do psychiatry!), or to finish the B.Psych degree and go on for a Doctor of Clinical Psychology at USyd.
At the moment I'm slightly leaning towards becoming a clinical psychologist because it seems to be advancing a lot more than the psychiatry profession, and clinical psychologists have a lot more demand in Australia and Japan than psychiatrists (10-11% of Japanese Psychiatrists still practice Freudian therapies
). Also, because psychiatry mainly revolves around solving problems with medication + light/no therapy (ie sometimes 15 minute sessions), whereas psychology takes a therapy focus + medication provided by a psychiatrist if necessary.
If those med reforms take place, and psychologists
can prescribe psychotropics, then i'll definitely take the clinical psychology option.
There's no way I'm going to become a GP and do counselling via that path, I think it's pathetic letting GPs do counselling. They should refer to a psychologist/psychiatrist (depending on the problem), rather than take short courses on counselling and using them to try and solve complex mind/brain problems.