r/publichealth • u/SadBreath PhD/MPH • Aug 28 '19
ADVICE School and Jobs Advice Megathread Part III
All job and school-related advice should be asked in here. Below is the r/publichealth MPH guide which may answer general questions.
See the below guides for more information:
- MPH Guide
- Job Guide
- Choosing a public health field
- Choosing a public health concentration
- Choosing a public health industry
Past Threads:
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u/raspberryturnoverz Sep 07 '19 edited Sep 07 '19
I'm looking for advice on what type of job to get after I graduate and want to hear opinions on if a CPA (accounting designation) title is very useful in public health.
I'm in an undergrad program for accounting and minoring in health sciences. My end goal is to be a professor and do research on health services. I'm also interested in doing healthcare consulting later on. I'm planning to work for a few years after graduation, apply for my Masters in health services research, and then a PhD later.
I really like strategy, research, implementation, and data analysis and see myself in an Analyst-type role. If the CPA is worth getting in public health, I'll have to work in an accounting-type job for two years so I can qualify to write the CPA exam. The problem is that I HATE accounting and don't care about it, even though my marks are higher than average in those courses. Is a Bachelor's in accounting good enough to emphasize my quant. skills or do I need more?? I'm also learning R programming on the side...
So it comes down to:
1) BCommerce + MSc + Phd ...or... 2) BCommerce + CPA + MSc + Phd
Thanks for your help.