Anyone know if there are jobs out there especially in good states such as Florida or the West Coast?
Anyone know if there are jobs out there especially in good states such as Florida or the West Coast?
Haven't looked at jobs yet, but will start in the next couple of years. Is it reasonably easy to find locums jobs in large cities, LA/SD for example. Any ballpark as to what hourly rates of locums look like? One of my senior residents has mentioned anything from 130-300/hr. Had this been your experience too?Possible, it's out there but the more odd the type of job you want the less likely you can find it. There's locums all across the country but it might not be in a place you'd like to be.
Haven't looked at jobs yet, but will start in the next couple of years. Is it reasonably easy to find locums jobs in large cities, LA/SD for example. Any ballpark as to what hourly rates of locums look like? One of my senior residents has mentioned anything from 130-300/hr. Had this been your experience too?
with locums, keep this in mind- there is a reason why it is a locums job. These arent jobs people want, for one reason or another. Sometimes it is a situation where the outfit has someone out for a month or two or can't find anyone temporarily, but more often than not they are doing the locums thing to avoid 'locking in' a provider at a physician level salary. In a lot of these cases the psychaitrist before was let go and the position is actively in transition from what was staffed by a psychiatrist to what will be staffed by a psych np.
And they just need a locums for a couple months while they get the collab worked out to staff it with a psych np. So this doesn't represent a good thing or opportunity in any sense, but rather is a position that saw a psychiatrist thrown out on their ass a month earlier and soon to be replaced by an np with an armchair collab agreement in place. Just out of principle I wouldnt touch crap like that, and you shouldnt either
Yeah that's good to keep in mind. I get random emails through doximity about jobs and sometimes click through. I notice these jobs sometimes talk about temp to hire. Would this a set up like this be something that would likely be a better option to pursue?
these are not jobs you need to pursue. I would stay away
You make it sound like it's tough to find a decent locums job out there. I'd love to find a decent locums (or any) job, 40 hours a week, minimum 200/hr. Anywhere between SD and LA. Am I crazy to think this will happen?
eh.....200/hr seems a little high. 160/hr seems more reasonable. Just to prevent people from reply after reply saying "oh yes there are 200-250/hr jobs"....yes, I know this. there are also 145-160 hr locums jobs, and the 150-160 hr jobs are going to be the ones people are more likely to find some satisfaction in working.
But sure, it's possible. But then what's next....to do it for 6 weeks and then pack your crap up an hour and a half away and live in another extended stay while you do it a different place for another 6 week? And then pack up again 60 more miles down the road?
I mean the very nature of these jobs is that they are transient and unappealing. or, as I said before, DONT WANT psychiatrists in them for long for some reason.
So no...you're not going to do it and enjoy it and do it in a stable situation for long.....if that were the case it wouldn't be a locums job.
What is your long term career goals? You realize that working crap locums jobs won't further those right??
Definitely don't want to have to pick up and move around to different cities. I guess I was assuming in a large metro area, I'd be able to find enough work without having to move. Maybe this was just wishful thinking.
My ideal work situation is inpatient gig in the morning (4x10s), be out by early afternoon. Slowly build a private practice in the afternoons/early evenings with at least some focus on addictions. Throw in 4-6 ER night shifts a month. Find one of those 48 hour weekend rounding gigs to do once a month. Generally take Fridays off or maybe half days if the pp really starts to build. Ideally all of that would allow me to hit between 4-500k a year. Loans are big and going back to socal is expensive. Longer term, once my loans are paid and the pp is really in full swing, I'd love to use those rich worried well to subsidize a very low cost addiction clinic a day or two a week.
Too ambitious?
My ideal work situation is inpatient gig in the morning (4x10s), be out by early afternoon. Slowly build a private practice in the afternoons/early evenings with at least some focus on addictions. Throw in 4-6 ER night shifts a month. Find one of those 48 hour weekend rounding gigs to do once a month. Generally take Fridays off or maybe half days if the pp really starts to build. Ideally all of that would allow me to hit between 4-500k a year. Loans are big and going back to socal is expensive. Longer term, once my loans are paid and the pp is really in full swing, I'd love to use those rich worried well to subsidize a very low cost addiction clinic a day or two a week
2) I don't know whan an ER shift is? I have covered numerous units over the years at big hospitals and not small hospitals. Not a single one has paid to have a psychiatrist work in the ER. Who would even pay for that as there is no need for it...the ED doc just calls me or someone else to admit the patient and we see the pt the next day. That sounds more like a residency thing
Good States? Florida? Am I missing something?
It should be easy to find a corrections or state hospital locums job paying that much in Socal.
[/QUOTE]Many places have psych EDs and they pay a lot to have them staffed.
This is very rare. Im sure there has been a psych ED that has paid a psychiatrist somewhere at some point in time.....but it's certainly not a common model. Why would it when it makes so much more sense for the ED doc to just admit(or not admit) them to the psych service and the psychiatrist will see them and do an initial note the next day.
200/hr is the new minimum.
Dude, stop talking so confidently about things you don't know.
but as a business model it wouldnt make a lot of sense because I don't see where the money comes to fund it. If you had insured patients, yeah the psychiatrist in the psych ED who admits the patient could do a H/P and bill for it....but that just means the psychiatrist on the unit won't be able to. it's a zero sum game and no new no billing revenue is collected. Insurers companies arent going to pay for a new patient eval in both the ED and the floor....they don't recognize such silly distinctions
fine...start listing all these psych EDs that have all these open/paid 'psych ED' shifts. If they are common surely you can pick a state and list 15 or so such places in that state that do this. Again, if it were common.
lmao....I haven't clicked on those links but none of them speak against any of what I am saying. My residency program had a 'psych ED' and 'psych EMS' section as well. It was a rotation people rotated through and was covered by different attendings. But what people here are referring to our community shifts one can do in a psych ED for pay. Like for example somewhere I could go to and say "hey I'm looking to pick up some extra work. Can I do an 8 or 12 hr shift in your psych ED for hourly pay". I know those are not common. Im sure one exists somewhere, but they certainly aren't common. Show me links advertising shift work in such a place for psychiatrists....
in fairness, such a thing doesn't exist in ANY field really. People take call from the ED. They may go in and see a patient there depending on the need and situation(although most community psychs don't). but outside of residency situations(or attendings who are employed in an academic program to teach the residents) they don't do shift work for pay just in the ED.
Where did anyone say community ED? These are psych EDs and many places have them. I personally moonlight at two different psych EDs, one where I work (not part of my regular job duties) and one across town as an external moonlighter/1099.
Again, stop talking about things you clearly don't know. It's obnoxious.
So basically, Florida has a lot of jobs? Do they pay well? I might get a license in both florida and California and then job search.
The point is you are comparing the Beyonce of American geography to the Kelly Rowland. Nothing against Kelly at all, but Beyonce gonna Beyonce. In medical terms, its like applying to Harvard or Indiana University, IU is great but these are not comparable in terms of competitiveness.
And more like Harvard v. University of PhoenixI'd say this is more like comparing Beyonce to William Hung. But hey, I'm biased.
lmao....I haven't clicked on those links but none of them speak against any of what I am saying. My residency program had a 'psych ED' and 'psych EMS' section as well. It was a rotation people rotated through and was covered by different attendings. But what people here are referring to our community shifts one can do in a psych ED for pay. Like for example somewhere I could go to and say "hey I'm looking to pick up some extra work. Can I do an 8 or 12 hr shift in your psych ED for hourly pay". I know those are not common. Im sure one exists somewhere, but they certainly aren't common. Show me links advertising shift work in such a place for psychiatrists....
in fairness, such a thing doesn't exist in ANY field really. People take call from the ED. They may go in and see a patient there depending on the need and situation(although most community psychs don't). but outside of residency situations(or attendings who are employed in an academic program to teach the residents) they don't do shift work for pay just in the ED.
You make it sound like it's tough to find a decent locums job out there. I'd love to find a decent locums (or any) job, 40 hours a week, minimum 200/hr. Anywhere between SD and LA. Am I crazy to think this will happen?
So Florida is considered less competitive than the West coast in terms of competitiveness for psychiatry employment opportunities? Interesting...does this include residency as well? How competitive are University of Washington and OHSU?Glad someone else said it, that was my thought within .01 seconds of reading that. OP if you think Florida is desirable, strongly recommend starting there for work over the west coast, there is a profound difference in competitiveness and availability of jobs.
I'm guessing University of Arizona - Phoenix is considered not that competitive? Unless you meant University of Phoenix as a reference to the online degree school. In which case, lol.And more like Harvard v. University of Phoenix
The latter, but I was alluding more towards QOL, unless Florida Man is your favorite super hero.So Florida is considered less competitive than the West coast in terms of competitiveness for psychiatry employment opportunities? Interesting...does this include residency as well? How competitive are University of Washington and OHSU?
I'm guessing University of Arizona - Phoenix is considered not that competitive? Unless you meant University of Phoenix as a reference to the online degree school. In which case, lol.
So Florida is considered less competitive than the West coast in terms of competitiveness for psychiatry employment opportunities? Interesting...does this include residency as well? How competitive are University of Washington and OHSU?
I'm guessing University of Arizona - Phoenix is considered not that competitive? Unless you meant University of Phoenix as a reference to the online degree school. In which case, lol.
Im more concerned about psychiatry attending jobs. I did one year of residency in Socal before transferring to the North east. My hospital in Socal was dying for a psychiatrist. So hopefully it should be fine to find a job there.The whole world at large finds the West Coast to be about the maximum in terms of competitiveness/desirability, take a look at the state of California's GDP when you get a chance. UW is an incredible medical establishment in general and OHSU is also very solid; the top Cali places go without saying. West Coast residencies are absolutely among the most competitive, particularly any of the named programs in Cali. The Atlantic NE programs will always have the history and name recognition but most folks these days would rather live on the West coast then the Atlantic NE region and doctor's are increasingly chasing lifestyle over other factors.
So basically, Florida has a lot of jobs? Do they pay well? I might get a license in both florida and California and then job search.
Tbh job listed earlier looks interesting. What are some of the best employed jobs with PTO that people have seen? VA provides 25 vacation, 13 sick leave, 10 federal holiday and usually some cme time as well.
That tbh job above seems to be a pretty good deal as well. Any other examples of generous PTO?