Do you guys know anyone who have gotten into medicine through B.A?
Also, I've heard that you can any undergrad degree before med, as long as you take biochem, anatomy and physiology at a second year level? What does this entail? Doing these subjects as a breadth? (If I do B.A) During first/second year?
Could someone clarify my confusion please?
To add to what Alter said re: pre-reqsHe mentioned equivalents. If you choose to study somewhere else, there are equivalents you can do so as to satisfy these pre-reqs, but you'll need to check on the UniMelb MD to make sure that these have been approved (the faculty produces a list of heaps of subjects at other unis that can be used to satisfy each of the pre-reqs for Melbourne).
Certainly at UniMelb it is probably a little more manageable trying to satisfy those pre-reqs via Arts, as you can do them in breadth (as Alter said).
Thoughts about Arts —> MDThere are only a handful of people who studied Arts before coming to the MD in my cohort. I know a couple who combined that with a Science degree, or who took a Science degree after they studied Arts. For all intents and purposes, these students are just like the other science/biomed students in med, with the added bonus of having those arts-skills under their belts.
I also know a few who studied Arts only. Their experiences of MD1, at least, have seemed to vary a bit. It seems that they probably struggle more with the science, and it was probably more of a stretch for them to adapt to the intensity of MD. All of that is to be expected, as their background isn't in science, so the type of study they're used to will be very different to the kind of study required in MD. Also, they have very little background knowledge to fall back on re: science, other than their pre-reqs.
With that said, I think they've still managed. Sure, they've had to work harder, but for some of them, having done a BA allows them to bring something different to MD. They certainly don't have a monopoly on the capacity for critical thought and analysis, but I think the BA probably prepares them for that better than other MDs. In my experience, they're more socially aware too, which I think perhaps is, in part, dictated by the BA itself, but also just comes from the fact that a certain kind of person is more likely to choose that pathway than another.