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At what age do you plan to retire after a career as a physician?
I don't have plans to retire. I'm sure I will one day, I don't plan on dropping in the OR or anything, but I'll work till I don't feel like working anymore.
Given the OP, I would like to institute a side poll: How many replies before the OP launches into a tirade about how you'll have to work until you're 127 to break even because medicine is such an awful career?
At what age do you plan to retire after a career as a physician?
I plan on working until after I die.
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Given the OP, I would like to institute a side poll: How many replies before the OP launches into a tirade about how you'll have to work until you're 127 to break even because medicine is such an awful career?
The days of retiring early in medicine based on a physician's salary ended several decades ago.
While I agree with you in the sense that reimbursements are steadily declining and that many fields are certainly not as ludicrous as they once were, I have to respectfully disagree with this sentiment and other views I have seen on SDN predicting financial woes for physicians. Personally, I didn't enter medicine for the money, and I have no plans to retire until I'm at least sixty-five (it seems like medicine should logically be a lifelong career given the need for doctors and the long personal and societal investment in training). But if you look at the real world job offers (as opposed to salary surveys which tend to underreport earnings as far as I have seen), there are plenty of specialties with incomes in the 300-400k range. It is not unheard of to see salaries of over 600k in some of the top earning specialties such as radiology. Granted, many primary care specialties fall far short of this, but earners in this upper range who save wisely and do not require lavish lifestyles could easily retire by age 55. Given that the per capita income in the US in 2007 was $38.6k and that somehow non-physicians manage to retire, I don't see how having 10x the income would present an insurmountable challenge to retirement.
That's possible if you donate your body to an anatomy lab.
Whatever man, my cadaver didn't do ****. He mostly just laid there.
If a single payer system gets instituted, I'll retire now and go on welfare since that seems to be the best route for a secure income in this country nowadays.
My goal is to work until the day that i am not longer able to work, which is hopefully the day I die. The longer I can keep my mind stimulated the better able i will be able to beat neurodegerative diseases and keep my sanility. However, i hope that in my olders years i can slow down, work less hours, and practice medicine the way it used to be done.
Whatever man, my cadaver didn't do ****. He mostly just laid there.
Yeah because people just love being on welfare! I bet single moms are running to pickup their checks with a smile on their face laughing all the way to the bank as they celebrate their own brilliant financial decision making (best route for a secure income nowadays as you say) and screw out hard working Americans like yourself!!! You're sooo right!!!!
If welfare really is so go great maybe you should go on it! Please. Now, please reply with a rant about how you worked soooo hard for everything you have and didn't have any help on the way there. We're very proud of you!
Ours made some squishing noises periodically.That's why they are called "silent teachers". 🙄
If a single payer system gets instituted, I'll retire now and go on welfare since that seems to be the best route for a secure income in this country nowadays.
We are studying many years to become good doctors ... and I think we should keep working to help others till the last day of our lives ..
my greetings ..
Until I'm satisfied I made enough money.
Add 1 vote to "Working until I'm a danger to my patients (due to alcoholism)."
I don't have plans to retire. I'm sure I will one day, I don't plan on dropping in the OR or anything, but I'll work till I don't feel like working anymore.
Given the OP, I would like to institute a side poll: How many replies before the OP launches into a tirade about how you'll have to work until you're 127 to break even because medicine is such an awful career?
As soon as I read your post, I thought to myself, it won't be the OP, it will be Law2Doc, and his (her?) theme won't be that medicine is an awful career, but that you need to be realistic and better love medicine for its own sake, because the golden age has passed, you can't count on making a lot of money anymore, incomes will continue to decline, and you will probably be able to completely retire only at a very advanced age. I swear, I thought all of that before I read on. And what do you know? The financial scold of SDN appeared right on cue.
I must say, though, why should anyone expect to retire, as we understand the term, anyway? For most of human history, people have had to work for as long as they possibly could, if only to avoid being a burden to their families, who had to take care of them when they became decrepit. If you think about it, for anyone--whether he be a doctor, engineer, teacher, or carpenter--to be able to quit working entirely with 20-30 years of healthy life left, and to be able to spend it doing nothing but playing golf and going on cruises, is an extreme luxury that no one should really feel entitled to. (I say this reluctantly, as someone who has always had a secret wish to be independently wealthy and spend his life puttering around the house and pursuing hobbies.) I'd hope to be done with full-time practice by the time I was 65, but can easily see myself continuing to work part-time, maybe locum tenens, through my seventies.
I guess I'll be the rarity -- 55 baby!