
Originally Posted by
LowT Mike
Most PA programs include clinicals. Which is part of the program where you do rotations in varying specialties just like a doctor. It always helps the old resume though to go
"shadow" at a doctors office. The Nuclear Medicine School I went too I ended up being the Educational Coordinator the year after I graduated. Admissions personnel and myself we really like the adamant candidate that has at least done and internship, worked or volunteered in some medicine and still loves it. Be adamant!!! Great thing about a PA or NP is that you dont have to specialize and be trapped liked doctors are in that speciality. You can jump around and see what is a good fit for you. Thats why I choose it. Very heavy in science, anatomy and physiology, chemistry, physics and math. Thats medicine.
Nuclear medicine is kindof a dying field. But you can transition out of like a pA or NP. I would suggest PA NP.
There are LOWT clinics and centers opening up everywhere that will hire you with a 6 figure salary and actually give you a % of the business for running the show. This is a great time for PAs and NPs to finally get out from under a lazy doctor and be your own boss. They really are the practitioners of the future. Depends on the state but yes you can open up your own practice and in some states as a NP or PA Just as long as you have a medical director that "oversees" practice. You can just hire a doctor for that and still be the boss.
Cholesterol and TRT. high cholesterol is usually a sign of LOWT. Sounds crazy but think about it. What are the building blocks of bioavaliable testosterone?? Cholesterol. Your body makes usable T out of cholesterol. So if you arnt making enough T then your lipid profile or cholesterol will increase. You can see the inverse of this with men who are taking too much T or guys that abuse high amounts of anabolic steriods. There HDL will decrease. The body is binding all the T to too much cholesterol. Overall a skilled practitioner that knows how to balance all the hormones out in a tailored fit for the patient will seen there lipid profile decrease. Ive pulled men off their glucaphage and metaformin (diabetic meds), SSRI's and antidepressants, statin cholesterol meds, blood pressure medications and many other medications that could of been avoided in the first place if the doctor just optimized the patients T level. Our medical system is broken and run by big pharmaceutical companies. I might be a conspiracy theorist but I believe there is a reason the DEA scrutinizes and makes it so hard for doctors to RX and compounding pharmacies to fill Testosterone. If every man in the US went on T it would bankrupt the majority of pharmaceutical companies "band-aid" medications that only treat symtoms. Look at the medications I mentioned I take patients off regulary. These are the top big pharma medications.