NO
A pediatrician is a doctor, but not all doctors are pediatricians.
A pediatrician receives an M.D., the same as any doctor, not a master's degree.
A pediatrician has to learn the same things all doctors do, they just specialize in children. If they can not physically help you, they can refer you to someone who can.
Pediatricians are doctors who specialize in treating children. They have the same health concerns as other doctors such as possibly catching something from patients, and being doctors, they also risk being carriers of communicable diseases. So they have to take care of themselves for their own sake and that of their patients.
Yes, a Doctor of Philosophy (PHD) is one kind of doctor. There are also doctors of medicine, doctors of jurisprudence (law), and doctors of Chiropractic Medicine among others.
They make around 40,000 to 50,000 dollars a year in Egypt. This is a popular higher paid job and is on the same level as doctors earn.
Lots of long distance learning courses can be taken to earn a degree from college. These courses can be taken in many different subjects and still earn you the same level of education as other degrees.
A pediatrician is a physician who specializes in treating children. A physician is a medical doctor who can specialize in many different medical fields. So, all pediatricians are physicians, but not all physicians are pediatricians.
A pediatrician is a doctor for younger children. Same qualifications as a doctor but a better understanding of child health issues.
Well scene doctors make so much money they should stay about the same rate. So doctors growing will probably go up. People are still in college for a doctors degree and that will make it go up!
A neurologist and a psychiatrist are the best specialists to diagnose Asperger's. If a pediatrician suspects it, s/he should refer you to a neurologist who specializes in neurodevelopmental disorders, or to a psychiatrist who specializes in neurobehavioral disorders. The best scenario is when an Aspie has both a neurologist and a psychiatrist as part of his medical team, coordinated by a primary care physician / pediatrician. In adulthood, an Aspie will want the same type of doctors but move on from the pediatric level to the physicians who treat adults with developmental disabilities.
If you are working on an a bachelor's degree, you are in a sense completing much of what is required for an associate degree. However, to obtain the associate degree you must be at an institution that offers the degree, and is the institution you attend offers both degrees, you must declare the associate degree first.