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Anyone have access to it and/or care to share?😀
Anyone have access to it and/or care to share?😀
Holy crap, I knew I was underpaid, but now I really feel terrible. It's made worse knowing the academic place where I work is low-paying in academics. Will continue to drive Honda from residency forever. Sigh...
Those numbers are BS.
There's no way the avg pathologist makes 377k.
You guys thinking 377K is unheard of have been spending too much time in academic institutions.
So what's the truth about the job market and salary? This is getting annoying.
amazing! we did far more than that 15-20 years ago as pp partners. if those numbers are true ( and i always discount them because i would "poor mouth" if asked myself) then the generation behind us is getting screwed.
I spoke to several 30s to 40s something pathologists at a recent conference teasing out of them what their salary was...100% of those in my informal survey were below the 254K 25th percentile level for AP/CP....
I knew they were underpaid, but it seems the newer staff is outright getting pimped!
sad.
Am I doing it wrong? 377K as mean. Sheesh. Anyone wanna come drink heavily with me.![]()
Agree with lipomas. Watching the current fellows fight over scraps for jobs. They would pee themselves to start at 180K and many have two fellowships.
Agree with lipomas. Watching the current fellows fight over scraps for jobs. They would pee themselves to start at 180K and many have two fellowships.
Agree with lipomas. Watching the current fellows fight over scraps for jobs. They would pee themselves to start at 180K and many have two fellowships.
Well that isn't true with everybody. There are like two classes of fellows. The good ones have groups peeing over themselves to hire, to be honest.
OMG. I almost peed reading this hahahaha. I can guarantee there is no single pathologist looking for work I would pee myself over.
The only pathologist worthy of a pee might be one so awesome he/she actually brings in business far excess of their salary, which I have never heard of. Ever. Anywhere.
Most groups are not looking for anyone and when I say most, I mean pretty much every single Pathology group I know...
it is far more common for a down on its luck Pathology group looking for business/contracts, than for a group looking for Pathologists...
now this is Private practice mind you, there are plenty of HMOs, Academics, Big Biz like Quest looking for newly minted types and willing to underpay you in the name of Capitalism.
Yeah well speaking as part of a group that just hired 4 people in the past two years, the good candidates are hard to find. And we are a private group. So it's not really off the wall to make that statement.
Yeah well speaking as part of a group that just hired 4 people in the past two years, the good candidates are hard to find. And we are a private group. So it's not really off the wall to make that statement.
Yeah well speaking as part of a group that just hired 4 people in the past two years, the good candidates are hard to find. And we are a private group. So it's not really off the wall to make that statement.
We've heard a few opinions about what makes a good candidate. Care to add yours to the mix, yaah?
Yeah well speaking as part of a group that just hired 4 people in the past two years, the good candidates are hard to find. And we are a private group. So it's not really off the wall to make that statement.
Volume growth + retirement + one person leaving mid career to change states for family reasons + acquisition of a new lab we have to run within our hospital system. Our group is less than 20.
1) Good training and diagnostic skills
2) Works well with others
3) Career stability (for an experienced person, someone who hasn't changed jobs 5 times; for a new graduate, someone who knows what they want to do)
4) Someone who isn't going to bail on the group in a couple of years because they get that job they always wanted in Miami or NYC (i.e. a connection to the area or a reason they will stay for the long haul).
5) Excellent communication skills
6) Adequate business sense/understanding
7) Well rounded in training and abilities
8) Passed the boards
9) References that are strong
10) Not having lots of detractors in the pathology community (word gets around)
11) Ethical, not sleazy or driven primarily by financial rewards
12) Brings something different to the group
13) Not an *******.
14) Respected by clinicians, ancillary staff i.e. techs and secretaries, colleagues
thanks for the helpful list, yaah. i suppose the tough thing is figuring out which applicants have those traits. only so much info you can get from CV and a 6 hour interview day.
Our group has hired (and unfortunately, fired) quite a few pathologists in the 12 years I've been here. In general, the only ones that work out are the people that we personally know from training, or are recommended by the mentors that trained us. I can't remember the last time we had success with someone from outside of that circle. There are a lot of bad pathologists out there, some with serious personal and/or professional problems.
Ive often thought that Pathologists were hired and fired with far greater regularity than any other type of physician (I have anecdotal evidence but no real data to support this).
This is due to the fact that Pathologists dont have any cred with patients (and even other M.D.s) and thus when fired are never at risk of taking any business away from you (unlike say a very popular Surgeon or Internist). Firing Pathologists is always a risk-free decision.
My guess is that the a vast majority of the pathologists you've fired have been FMGs with more cultural and communication issues than true intellectual ones. Am I right?
This really an artifact of "Pathology groups functioning as Syndicates" because due to closed contracts, they have a de facto monopoly on the speciality within the hospital as well as the area.
Let me expand:
You cant come to a town and hang up a shingle as a Pathologist, you engage the local group and seek an audience. The Syndicate will always seek to maintain the heirarchy and status quo and often does this by CREATING the high turnover on purpose. The high turnover leads to a sense of instability among junior Syndicate members and thus decreases their willingness to rebel against the status quo.
This is essentially direct Social Control Theory in action. I put its origin in American Pathology somewhere in the 1970s.