This is going to focus on the TNG era, though discussions of other eras are welcome.
We don't have a lot of data about what it takes to become a doctor in Starfleet. The only doctors where we know much about their education are Crusher and Bashir. And while Doctor Crusher had basically what you'd expect, Doctor Bashir didn't.
From what we have seen, higher education in the 24th century is very like it is today. (As the saying goes, science fiction is always more about the present than the future.)
Dr. Crusher's personnel file in "Conundrum" shows her attending Starfleet Academy for eight years. This would match with four years for an undergraduate degree, and then four more to obtain an MD.
In the modern world an MD is not enough to become a doctor: you need to earn a license, which involves essentially an apprenticeship called Residency. In some cases Residents are called Interns (though apparently use of those terms is not 100% consistent).
And again, we have Dr. Crusher mentioning that she served as an Intern under another doctor years ago.
But Dr. Bashir doesn't appear to have done a Residency.
I am not certain he never mentions one, but he definitely didn't have time for one: Residency runs for three to eight years depending on specialty.
But if Julian Bashir started Starfleet Academy at 18 (it is rare for anyone younger to be accepted and he never mentions getting in early), then he would have completed his undergraduate degree at 21 or 22 (depending on when his birthday is).
Then add four years of Medical School and he's 25 or 26.
And he was 26 when he was posted to DS9.
So he skipped Residency. He was never an Intern. And while maybe the education system has changed in 300 years, Doctor Crusher was an Intern.
Another thing (though less bothersome): in the modern military Doctors enter at a fairly high rank: in the army as Captains in the Navy as full Lieutenants. And given Data's description of what was probably a typical Starfleet career this fits pretty well: graduate the Academy as an Ensign, become a Lieutenant Junior Grade halfway through med school, and become a Lieutenant when you finish your Residency.
But Doctor Julian Bashir was a LtJG when he arrived at DS9. As far as I know he is the only Doctor ever shown who held such a low rank.
I'm not sure what my point is. I guess I'm wondering if anyone has a decent theory to explain this inconsistency that isn't "sometimes they do it differently", or worse "they wanted Bashir and Dax to be young fresh-faced junior officers, and they weren't paying attention to how rare it is for a doctor to be under 30".
I mean, that last one is probably it, but it isn't very satisfying,
We don't have a lot of data about what it takes to become a doctor in Starfleet. The only doctors where we know much about their education are Crusher and Bashir. And while Doctor Crusher had basically what you'd expect, Doctor Bashir didn't.
From what we have seen, higher education in the 24th century is very like it is today. (As the saying goes, science fiction is always more about the present than the future.)
Dr. Crusher's personnel file in "Conundrum" shows her attending Starfleet Academy for eight years. This would match with four years for an undergraduate degree, and then four more to obtain an MD.
In the modern world an MD is not enough to become a doctor: you need to earn a license, which involves essentially an apprenticeship called Residency. In some cases Residents are called Interns (though apparently use of those terms is not 100% consistent).
And again, we have Dr. Crusher mentioning that she served as an Intern under another doctor years ago.
But Dr. Bashir doesn't appear to have done a Residency.
I am not certain he never mentions one, but he definitely didn't have time for one: Residency runs for three to eight years depending on specialty.
But if Julian Bashir started Starfleet Academy at 18 (it is rare for anyone younger to be accepted and he never mentions getting in early), then he would have completed his undergraduate degree at 21 or 22 (depending on when his birthday is).
Then add four years of Medical School and he's 25 or 26.
And he was 26 when he was posted to DS9.
So he skipped Residency. He was never an Intern. And while maybe the education system has changed in 300 years, Doctor Crusher was an Intern.
Another thing (though less bothersome): in the modern military Doctors enter at a fairly high rank: in the army as Captains in the Navy as full Lieutenants. And given Data's description of what was probably a typical Starfleet career this fits pretty well: graduate the Academy as an Ensign, become a Lieutenant Junior Grade halfway through med school, and become a Lieutenant when you finish your Residency.
But Doctor Julian Bashir was a LtJG when he arrived at DS9. As far as I know he is the only Doctor ever shown who held such a low rank.
I'm not sure what my point is. I guess I'm wondering if anyone has a decent theory to explain this inconsistency that isn't "sometimes they do it differently", or worse "they wanted Bashir and Dax to be young fresh-faced junior officers, and they weren't paying attention to how rare it is for a doctor to be under 30".
I mean, that last one is probably it, but it isn't very satisfying,