I was having a conversation with a physician on the Allo forum and he is resolute in his observation that junior Attendings put in more hours that residents. That contradicts with my basic assumptions.
In my happy little world. I work my butt off to train in this specialty for 4 years and then I'm considered a go-getter because I put in an extra week end shift. And I put in 60 hours for a few years and then drop down to 50 for a mid career groove. In my later years maybe 35-45.
He's saying as a junior attending worth my salt I'll be cranking at near the 80 mark. With the implication that it is a sense of duty to my relative inabilities that I would put in the time. Or that this is the reality of junior doc's who want a good career position.
Who's projections are more accurate? Have I been fooled by reading more here? Is Psych different from the other fields?
Thanks
In my happy little world. I work my butt off to train in this specialty for 4 years and then I'm considered a go-getter because I put in an extra week end shift. And I put in 60 hours for a few years and then drop down to 50 for a mid career groove. In my later years maybe 35-45.
He's saying as a junior attending worth my salt I'll be cranking at near the 80 mark. With the implication that it is a sense of duty to my relative inabilities that I would put in the time. Or that this is the reality of junior doc's who want a good career position.
Who's projections are more accurate? Have I been fooled by reading more here? Is Psych different from the other fields?
Thanks