3 Reasons Biomedical Engineering is a BAD Degree

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The top engineering degrees can pay you well over $100K, but they are also some of the hardest college degrees out there. Today I will be Ranking The HARDEST Engineering Degrees and explain if they are truly worth all the hard work and studying. Not all engineering majors can get you high paying jobs after college, some of the worst engineering degrees have no demand and can be bad investments, so it is important you do research into all the engineering majors and choose the best engineering major for you. Some of the engineering degrees I'll touch on in this video include mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, chemical engineering, computer engineering, biomedical engineering, aerospace engineering and more!! I hop you ENJOY :)

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I like the part where he mentions the 3rd reason

yassomesho
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Because of the variety of topics, you are preparing for a job in management where you work with a variety of teams including clinicians, researchers, and engineers. It's a good degree.

jtekmmx
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Reminder to current and prospective biomedical engineers that a guy posting videos like "easiest college majors with the highest salary" should not dictate your degree. Half of getting a job is proving you are a hardworking, reliable, social, and smart person. Major in what you're interested in; biomedical engineering is sick as hell!!

will-gum
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So for anyone who is pursuing a bachelors in biomedical engineering, I highly recommend to not do that. If you’re like me, and want engineering side of the medical field, you’re going to have to figure out where you will be an engineer in that area. Most biomedical companies will hire electrical engineers, mechanical engineers, software engineers, etc to fulfill the team task and hire them as biomedical engineers. So if you want to work with imaging and signal filtering/processing, look for electrical engineering degree focusing on signal processing. If you want to go into prosthetic design, you’re going to need a mechanical engineering background and even electrical engineering as well. So if you like working with signals go that route, but if you’re more on mechanical modeling go mechanical. Biomedical engineering is best pursued as a masters degree.

natedogmarik
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Everyone doesn't have to do mechanical engineering.

elvisnnaemeka
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dude we have our own company .. we're making lot of money.. I fully disagree with your video

AdiskaBiomedicals
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Same thing with literally every engineering degree....

bitorange
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His reason applies to ALL stem related fields .. undergraduate is where you start your learning, not where you end it .. this isn’t marketing

Daniyoyo
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This guy is wrong for the most part. Biomedical engineering is actually one of the most in-demand technical fields that you can join. You will get a job really fast since they are not a popular type of work. As far as it not being "deep enough, " I could respond with, "Do you actually know what a biomed knows?" If the answer is yes, you will know that there's not too much to know when it comes to repairing medical equipment. So you don't need to know more than what you're certified for.

liberationpocket
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Final semester biomed student here. Can confirm we don’t deep dive into anything. We learn a bit of biology (especially if you’re pre-med) and we learn basic to intermediate electrical engineering concepts. Like signal processing and apply that to biological systems.

Scrotie
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What about a Masters in Biomedical Engineering after a Mechanical undergrad?

that_g_u_y_
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It’s an Engineering degree bro… it’s definitely not a BAD degree, maybe not a preferable one if you really wanna throw shade

that_g_u_y_
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The best way is to get to Biomedical Equipment technician as a started and slowly build your certifications on different equipment. You can specialize on specific equipment and get you bachelor’s degree and go from there. Eventually you will get to Biomedical Engineering degree but you will be at a management position by then.

maxxcells
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One thing to keep in mind is that with this degree I can go a course where u can usually also go to med school

abaki
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I disagree. If your goal is solely based on getting a job right after undergrad, maybe choose something else. (But isn't it already challenging to find jobs in general?) I chose bioengineering because it was broad. Just like any other engineering degree (yes, even electrical engineering and mechanical engineering), a biomedical engineering degree gives you an introduction to various fields of bioengineering. Your career really depends on your projects, lab work, research, internships, and other extracurricular activities—not just the degree itself.

Funny thing is… so do all those other engineering degrees! I have a lot of friends in mechanical engineering, yet they all have different career interests. One is into mechatronics, another into robotics, and another into biomechanics. Yet, they technically have the same degree.

So really, if you're calling out biomedical engineering as a "bad" degree just because the degree itself doesn't hand you a job… well… sorry to break it to you, but so do all the other engineering majors (yes, even computer science majors too!).

YounseoChoi-pebd
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100% agree. Get a mechanical or electrical engineering degree and then go work for a bio med company.

JoeSmoeDoeLow
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Totally agree, but we know a bit of everything, it will make a good for oversight or managing or evaluation process.

FadyKassar
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Blud, genetic engineers can treat cancer, no branch can accept this type of respect ❤

sigmawolf
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i m studying biomedical engineering and for me it s the best because i wanted to go to med school but i couldn t afford it, it s really hard but so interesting and complex

sure_not_me_theo
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That is so true. I have been struggling to find a career path after it. The job requires knowledge of things that the degree just provide the surface knowledge of. The theory and lab work both stop at intermediate level.

jenniferambrose
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