Thank you for your post.
Someone mentioned this had a slight negative tone, but I would say this is an objective account, although I feel there is room for variation within this experience. I am wondering if your feelings have now changed (I assume you are now RMO 3/4) - did you end up taking a year off?
I am curious as to how it removes their ability to make a living - isn't rural medicine quite lucrative with all the subsidies?My understanding is that there are three main differences between the two:
1) the MRBS obliges you to work in a rural area, as opposed to the bonded scheme where you can work in any "area of need", which can include outer metro. You actually have a lot more flexibility with just the bonded
2) if you breach the bonded scheme, you suffer a financial penalty (essentially become a DFEE student at a time when you're more able to pay it). If you breach your MRBS contract you can lose the ability to a provider number for up to 12 years - essentially meaning you cannot access medicare rebates for your services. This is extremely significant, and would essentially end your medical career. Given that virtually every medical service in Australia is subsidised, your options are to: a) open a clinic catering to the small portion of the population who are eligible for medicare and magically make enough to survive, b) practice an area of medicine which doesn't attract rebates (cosmetic medicine, or weird alternative therapies), c) use your medical degree to enter another field.
3) several of the more sub-specialised career paths will become unavailable, as they can only be practiced in locations which the MRBS would not cover.
Frankly I find the whole MRBS system to be extremely unfair. It exploits rural students who aren't from rich backgrounds and forces them into a career path when they have virtually no life experience. I would have no problem with them being required to pay back the scholarship and even suffering a large financial penalty on top of that (say $100k), but to remove their ability to make a living is appalling.
Someone mentioned this had a slight negative tone, but I would say this is an objective account, although I feel there is room for variation within this experience. I am wondering if your feelings have now changed (I assume you are now RMO 3/4) - did you end up taking a year off?
There aren't a lot of jobs that are guaranteed in general. Once you have completed your internship, finding a job is easy as a doctor. Finding a job that furthers your career might be difficult - you have to reapply for your job every year and the cards won't always fall the right way.To think that 7 years of university is not enough to guarantee a job, as a doctor, beyond 2 years duration... Such a gamble.