Biology vs Biochemistry vs Chemical Engineering?

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SUMMARY

For students planning to attend medical school, a Bachelor’s degree in Biochemistry is the most advantageous choice, as it fulfills all medical school prerequisites, including courses in chemistry, organic chemistry, biology, and physics. In contrast, a degree in Chemical Engineering, while highly marketable and covering approximately 75% of medical school requirements, focuses more on chemical processes and may not provide the same depth of medical knowledge. Biology degrees, while common, do not offer the same level of preparation for the MCAT or medical school. Ultimately, Biochemistry is recommended for those aiming for a career in medicine due to its comprehensive curriculum and relevance to medical studies.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of MCAT requirements
  • Familiarity with medical school prerequisites
  • Knowledge of Biochemistry and its relevance to medicine
  • Awareness of the differences between Biology, Biochemistry, and Chemical Engineering
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the specific course requirements for medical school admissions
  • Explore Biochemistry programs at local universities
  • Investigate the job market and career paths for Chemical Engineering graduates
  • Learn about the MCAT preparation strategies and study resources
USEFUL FOR

Students considering medical school, academic advisors, and individuals evaluating the marketability of degrees in Biology, Biochemistry, and Chemical Engineering.

Razael
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I'm planning on going down the medical path. Will a Bachelor in each of these prepare me for the MCAT and what I'll see in medical school? Less importantly, how "sellable" are these degrees relative to each other (should the medical path not work out)?
 
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Biology and biochemistry overlap in areas such as organic chemistry, cell bio, genetics, etc. Pure biology includes areas such as ecology, evolution, botany, etc. If you want to go to medical school, I would suggest biochemistry (or a pre-med program).

Chemical engineering is a different field altogether. I don't know much about this field but my good friend is a chemical engineer and does not know a thing about the medical field - his work is more about (what he calls) chemical processes. Most, if not all, of the engineering graduates I am friends with got a job right out of school, biology not so much.
 
I don't know enough about the various degrees to comment on each one's marketability, though engineering fields are generally pretty good for that.

As someone who planned for a long time to ultimately attend medical school, I'll second the biochemistry recommendation for preparation. Just using the local university and med school as an example, the biochemistry degree fills all the med school's requirements (specifically: a year each of English, chemistry, organic chemistry, biology, physics, and another science), throws in another useful sequence (namely, biochemistry itself), and leaves room for other possibly useful classes (anatomy/physiology, immunology, medical microbiology, endocrinology, etc).

Keep in mind that the MCAT is more a test of reasoning ability than it is a test of knowledge. While extra courses will undoubtedly help, the basic requirements for med school admission should be adequate if all else fails. Also, as I'm sure you realize, make sure you pay attention to things outside of your coursework as well. There are many many students with excellent numbers applying to med school every year, and only something like 50% of applicants are actually accepted. Work on becoming the most well-rounded person you can be.

Good luck, in any case. :)
 
chemical engineering is already hard enough, about 136 hours of work in 4 years at my state university, with premed requirements it will be extremely difficult coursework.

biology is what most people do
 
Thanks for the advice guys. I don't want to end up competing in a saturated field after 4 years of work (Gotta save Starbucks for the Liberal Arts majors :smile:)
 
biology degrees are a dime a dozen and most of those students are intellectual treestumps
biochemistry will hit all of your med prereqs but is amazingly boring (biochem & microbio is often useful for med students)
chem eng is highly marketable and depending on your school will cover roughly 75% of med school prereqs, not to mention that having such an undergrad degree will separate you from the applicant pool (in a pleasantly surprising way)
 

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