Thanks guys

A lot of great advice here already
why not engineering/biomed at monash? it seems that none of your reasons for monash take into account why you are doing commerce...
I haven't considered that one yet, seems like a good mix of the two options. Also allows me to go for post grad med if I want to as well, will give some serious consideration to this.

Kinda chose commerce because it apparently increases employability? Is this even true for a chemical engineer?
So hard to help you choose which one. What are your views on medicine? Do you want to do it, or are you being pressured into it?
I'm not being pressured, that's for sure. I really want to do med, but the main issue is, that I can totally see myself neglected/procrastinating GMASAT study (like I did with the UMAT), and then I'd be left with a career I don't really want to do all that much
To be perfectly honest, I'm equal between med and engineering. Med has its positives (more science based, more people interactions, enjoyed my experience at RCH, etc.) and so does engineering imo (has maths in it, simpler and shorter pathway, still has people interactions - albiet of a different type, etc.).
Chemical Engineering doesn't have as much chemistry as the name indicates. I found materials engineering to have more chemistry.
It's moreso to do with physics in all honesty (though you do study through till second year chem, and apply principals of chemistry all the way through).
At the open day (Monash) earlier this year, I talked to one of guys about this (as I dislike many areas of VCE physics), and apparently the physics involved isn't the phsyics I really dislike (electronics, photonics, magnets, etc.). He said that the physics it uses is entwined with the chemistry? Using things like fluid mechanics and thermo mechanics/chemistry? (my memory is still full of richard quotes...)
Ignore the scholarship for now, 30K over the course of a lifetime isn't that much.
Yeh I agree (should have made this more clear at the start, my bad), this really isn't much in the long-term. I'm not going to base my decision on this value anyway

BEng/BComm:
-Engineering/commerce is definitely a safer option (eg. You've got a career at the end of it in chemical engineering and you've been studying this for 5 years and would be pretty employable)
-As you've mentioned you can leave after your third year in the double degree and get into post grad med. you've got a scholarship which is nice.
-Monash have top industry links so the engineering degree would be awesome from there
- Yeh, I like the safety, I know what I'll end up if I pass
- I think that this point, combined with moekamo's, seems to be very appealing
- YES! I've heard this true, which is the main reason why I'm not pursuing engineering at Melbourne (+ Melbourne's shifty "Master of Engineering" isn't appealing). Can I get some more confirmation of Hamdog17's point?
BBiomed
-I've heard workload is more than other undergrad degrees (i've heard about 20 contact hours a week plus additional study) but nothing insane. Probably a lot of competition between students though so you may find yourself studying a fair bit more that get that insane GPA.
I've heard this too (stonecold), it's pretty heavy. I'm really concerned that after such a heavy course (I'd want to score well too), whether or not I would have the motivation to study for the GAMSAT in the summer break...

Engineering / Comm. at Monash.
Have the option of being buddies with taiga and getting trolled by me (and vice versa).
You could lodge at Monash for cheap, or should you wish to rent with friends,
renting a house near the Clayton area cost around $400 or 500 p/w.
That, or you can always crash my house for a day or something.
...
3) If you don't want to do those then not a whole lot. You'd have to get kinda lucky with moving into the private sector and a relevant masters
5) Study over summer, none
3)

That's an issue
5) How much study did you do Russ? (and other successful grad med applicants)
Again, thanks

Sorry for being a bit ambiguous and vague in my earlier post