They start off like their fellow peers, working at an undergraduate, probably in a science such as chemistry or biology, since this is where medicine is derived from. After an undergraduate degree is gained, it will take a fair resume and a strong passion to graduate from a four year medical school. This is where medical students began to diverge and select a specialization. Should emergency medicine be on the agenda then their education will continue with a residency, and finally an exam to pass every ten years. Despite the costly amount, a definite disadvantage, that eight or more years of schooling will be, according to cbsnews.com, they will go onto to make over 200,000 dollars a year. No number should be a determining factor in such a career though. Emergencies are growing just as the population, thus it demands a workforce of passion in the future of medicine. In the face of life-taking events, the passion that once compelled a young student down a road of trying to change such a fate is the life-altering part— the moral benefit— in the eyes of an emergency physician, or any driven medical …show more content…
It is instinct to call for help, to seek it out, because nobody should have to live with pain. At the dial of 911, first-responders can transport a patient to the emergency clinic where this lifeline can be met by the hands of someone who’s focus is shifted on the life of the patient and the severity of the problem. What needs are there will be met, and opposing to what medicine used to be, the “ritual” of healing is based on modern, effective practices. Although, these practices would be nothing without the minds that use them. Each person grows to find their place in a growing community, and a growing world, but in the times when we are knocked down by forces beyond ourselves (or even because of ourself), we count on the people who are still working with a passion to heal— a force that does not weaken, yet thrives on the motive to heal twenty-four