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| Med Business [ MD/MBA, DO/MBA, DDS/MBA ] For those currently in combined MBA programs and interested students. | RSS: |
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Senior Member
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#2 | |
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Watch my TAN walk!!
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Just gett'in my TAN on...you know...do'in what I do!! |
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#3 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 112
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#4 | |
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Word.
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It's possible that in ten years, the vast majority of physicians will be hospital employed. However, that still isn't to say that there aren't other business opportunities if you've got the business acumen to pull them off. |
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#5 |
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Advisor
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Definition of "business" is key. I've found that many surgeons love to create devices and are entrepreneurial. Others who share an entrepreneurial spirit include emergency medicine and anesthesiology. Why? Seems like there are many types of opportunities within those fields.
As for traditional corporate business, I'd say: primary care, internal medicine, hospital medicine, etc. Being grounded in fundamental "medical science" is what's key. Of course, there are still many different types of opportunities for medical and surgical specialists and some of the most successful medical businesspeople are specialists.
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Joseph Kim, MD, MPH www.DrJosephKim.com Physician technologist, digital entrepreneur, and founder of NonClinicalJobs.com |
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#6 | |
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5K+ Member
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Thoughts??? |
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#7 | |
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Word.
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Haha, actually, even in large corporations, internal affairs can usually solve most of the company's problems. Management/strategy consulting is about as murky as it gets when it comes to efficacious results and proposals. My buddy at BCG says his boss always tells their analysts that the best thing you can do after 6 months of working on a project is to rehash what the client tells you on the first day, and if the numbers don't fit, make them fit. ![]() An even bigger problem that in such an economic milieu for medicine, practices will be run very lean. Physicians will be very reluctant to add to their operating costs (this is true even during good times) in order to hire an advisor. Even if there are a few physicians out there willing to pay for consulting services, i still don't see a big enough market to sustain an actual consulting firm. (maybe a small 2-3 man group is possible) Also, a big part of running a success practice is growth of patient load, which will be HIGHLY variable depending on location. The business model for a rural practice would be far different from one in a supersaturated market in an urban setting. And even similarly sized markets in different states would have very different needs. It would be extremely difficult for consultants to become well versed enough in these nuances to be able to provide long term significant value adds to the client. Private practice consulting can still be a viable idea, depending on the landscape of healthcare. Those are just a few issues that come to mind without deeper analysis. Last edited by bronx43; 05-12-2010 at 11:56 AM. |
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#8 | |
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5K+ Member
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#9 |
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Sicker than your average
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What's this business of EM? I figured most of those guys were hospital employees, unless we were talking about running some kind of urgent-care facility?
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#10 |
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Member
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bump..
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#11 |
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New Member
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 4
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Quite a few dermatologists have built their own derm companies.
Radiation oncologists also have built some large practices that now are owned by fortune 100 companies Oncologists have also been involved in many biotech start-ups |
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#12 |
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Senior Member
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#13 |
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person
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Many of the ED docs work in groups. If you become a partner or owner of such a group then there is potential for more use of business/management skills there. They own/run urgent care centers as well. Also, because of the vast amount of free time that EM offers, its possible to run a side business as well. The last depends on how often you tend to be manic or the amount of uppers that you use.
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It’s not enough to do good. It must be done well. –Vincent de Paul |
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#14 | |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 14
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OP, the phrasing "conducive to business" is fairly ambiguous. Does "business" refer to private practice? Hospital administration? Biotech industry? The radiologist who owns a private practice is in a very different position from the oncologist who leads a biotech start-up. |
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#15 |
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2K Member
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Using an MBA in the corporate world will decrease your salary. Clinical medicine earns more money.
The benefit to an MBA is using it to establish your own LARGE practice. If you want to start a small private practice, it would be cheaper and more efficient to hire someone. A large multidisciplinary practice that is efficient and profitable is hard to do from the ground up. Someone with an MBA (vs just MD) may be able to do this more efficiently in certain regions of the country. Having the capital to start a large multidisciplinary clinic is difficult for any one physician, so being able to cut out the costs of hiring other business minded people could be the difference between profit and going broke. The majority of MD's with an MBA do not use it, but it can be beneficial in certain areas.
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richaschocolate.com - your personal finance blog. I do not sell any product or service. Just a free website to help out friends. |
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#16 | |
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Member
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I know of a guy here in NC that consulted country-wide for private practice physicians to merge to cash only (ie non-insurance) practices. As I recall, he was making several thousand dollars per consult. He quit doing this because he began opening subsidiary companies of his practice in which he got a portion of their revenue. I guess that was significantly more profitable for him. |
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#17 |
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God Complex
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urology and cards (who knows how long though - hear they are getting torpedo'd)
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#18 |
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Junior Member
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I know I'm reviving this old thread, but I just had a conversation with my MD/MBA mentor about this and thought I'd share. She mentioned that if you'd like to do "pure business" (i.e. finance, consulting, etc...) where you will effectively be pursuing 2 careers simultaneously, it may be better to be in a speciality with a predictable work schedule where you can work part time (such as ER, anesthesia, etc....). Basically something where you can schedule shifts and not be on call every day. That being said, with all of the recent trends towards doctors being employed by larger groups and/or hospitals, this may not make such a big deal in a few years as you may be able to set your own schedule in virtually every field (albeit while taking the necessary pay cut).
If you're interested in pursuing business in the sense of running your own practice and the likes, I think any speciality conducive to private practice would work out best (for example, it may be hard to utilize your MBA if you're a neurosurgeon working for a trauma center and the administration deals with all the business). Either way, you might be able to learn some more here http://www.mdmbas.com/ForMDMBACandid...sandResources/ |
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