<p>I'm interested in all these career fields. Please give me your own opinion about these careers and which I should go for. I love making things. But I also like Helping others and doing research. So...just compare and contrast these different careers.</p>
<p>Not sure what a medical researcher requires as far as a degree goes so I can't really comment much on that.</p>
<p>But I'll comment on the other two. A doctor of any sort is going to need to go to school for a long time and it might be a long road to get to where you want to be. You'll work long hours. But you'll be directly helping people and it is a very prestigious career.</p>
<p>An engineer basically has a rough 4 years of school. You don't need a graduate degree though it definitely doesn't hurt. You may or may not work long hours depending on company and project. You should make pretty good money and being an engineer is an impressive career in my opinion. </p>
<p>Either path you take you'll be employed and make good money. </p>
<p>Biomedical engineering might be a good fit for you.</p>
<p>Go for biomedical engineering. Be sure to take the generic pre-med courses to keep all of your options open. </p>
<p>After you go through your first four years at college, you should get a better idea of what you want to do. You could stay as an engineer and be a sort of medical researcher or you could go to med school. And yes, most doctors make a ton more money than engineers do, but an engineer's salary in itself is pretty remarkable. Many make six-figure salaries, but it takes several years to get up to that amount.</p>