- Joined
- Mar 24, 2008
- Messages
- 58
- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 4,531
- Pre-Medical
I was hoping to find out the avg salary is for EM attendings. I have found some data online but would like to hear from some of you. Also, is it true that as an EM attending you work 3-4 twelve hour shifts a week? Thanks in advance.
I also really want to know what are ED attending working hours like?
In the time it took you to be a smart ass you could have answered the question just as easily, but thanks anyway Ninja...

You may wish to be careful with the personal attacks being that you have a grand total of 20 posts (as of this post). Many see people not unlike yourself coming in asking questions such as yours as trolling for a war of words. :troll:
If you don't like smart asses, you might not want to read/post in the EM forum as most of us around these parts are just that.![]()
I really appreciate your response...I was starting to think like you 'why do I keep coming back here'. That sounds like pretty good money and also pretty good hours. I am the type who loves medicine but also loves to be home with my wife and relaxing, that is why EM is quickly moving up my list of career choices. Again, thank you for the honest and thoughtful response. Anyone else out there willing to offer salary and shift advice?
I could care less about upsetting someone who is my 'superior' simply because I stated the obvious that someone was being a smart ass...
You would think with the money and hours it would be more competitive.
You would think with the money and hours it would be more competitive.
You would think with the money and hours it would be more competitive.
DPT2MD, if your between EM and surgery, mention that to some of your surgery attendings once you start clinicals, if you have a good rapport with them. Yes, I am serious. I did and I am in EM now, thank God! Sure you will get some flak from them at first about EM docs as triage docs etc. but when it comes down to it, every private practice surgeon told me that if I could live without surgery to go for EM. I need to keep them on my Christmas card list.
EM is perfect for the person who liked a little bit of every rotation, but none of them enough to do that specialty exclusively.
EM is perfect for the person who liked a little bit of every rotation, but none of them enough to do that specialty exclusively.
I really like critical care, IM, gyn, ortho, etc. Just none of them enough to do exclusively.
I also loved surgery but not enough to be a surgeon. Of course, med students often think surgery is only about being in the OR (ie working with hands) and forget about all the pre/post op management, clinic, etc that must be done.
I love parts of the OR. But the procedures I get to do in the ED are enough for me. Plus, more importantly, I love the essence of EM.
Quite a weird reaction to get from what you thought was an innocent post, huh? Ive been lurking around here for several years now since I was in med school. People tend to forget the reason that student doctor exists, (for students). I know that I viewed student doctor as a kind of mentor, since I didnt have a good mentor in medical school. Some people on here get extremely anal when you bring something up that they have already discussed. They read your post and think, Gosh, what a ******, we discussed like just three years ago (Read that quote with a Napoleon Dynamite voice). Some people view numbers of posts as a pre-requisite to be in the cool ER crowd. You get the impression that they would write on the rest of their resumes for the rest of their lives that they have 1000+ posts on student doctor. Why do I come here? It is a sick obsession that my wife tells me I need to stop. I get a kick out of a lot of the threads and once in a while, learn something. Once in a while, somebody will be extremely helpful and post a link to the previous discussion, rather than flame the OP. I think mostly, that people just love to win an argument, and put others down while being completely anonymous. I'm making around $220,000 a year just out of residency. I work 12 12's a month.
They just don't understand what search terms to use or how to scan quickly through the results and figure out which of them are good and which are not.
You may wish to be careful with the personal attacks being that you have a grand total of 20 posts (as of this post). Many see people not unlike yourself coming in asking questions such as yours as trolling for a war of words. :troll:
If you don't like smart asses, you might not want to read/post in the EM forum as most of us around these parts are just that.![]()
Just my 2 cents...you can still do searches for these answers even if it was 3 years ago. I know this was discussed already once this year, so there is even up to date information. Please just do a simple search.
There's no excuse for anyone to jump on someone for not using the search function. What the hell do you care? I see all such responses as nothing more than an attempt to come up with a witty response and in turn bolster their e-image.
as there are people (including me) that do not include a quip or an insult in suggesting that someone use the search function.
it becomes less likely that someone who might have more experience with the topic at hand would be willing to engage in discourse with someone newer that makes an inquiry that seems simplistic or unresearched.
so how much do they make, exactly?....
i'm reminded of the question: if you had a million dollars what would you do for a living?
a better question is: if surgeons worked 12 to 15 days a month, how much would they make? or, if EP's worked 25 days a month, how much would they make?
more in line with common sense, i'd say
In theory, yes. In practice, no.It's not like Boolean search terms are required these days.
Simply clicking the "Search" button then typing "physician salary" is going to bring up some good topics.
Yeah man, I hear you. Trauma and procedures are sweet, no lie. But I actually have a lotta fun with "chest pain" or some such. And I 😍 the sometimes insanity of it all. Crazy drunk guy in 10? The soon-to-be PES admission in 15? Head lac s/p assault in 20? Give it to me. I dunno, if it's like that when I walk in for my shift, I get pumped.Something to think about:
Maybe it's just me, but the more and more I'm involved in EM, the more and more it seems to be more medicine-oriented and less-surgery oriented. Sure, plenty of different procedures to do, but they don't seem to be focus of it. Course, I have a skewed and limited perspective on things. But I've had friends who consider EM because they want to be surgical without going into surgery. And when I ask them how they liked medicine, they hated it. I know if they go into the field, they're going to hate all the primary care stuff we have to deal with (err...moreso than most of us)
I can't imagine how someone who despised their medicine rotation would last long in EM.
for the rounding? or the pathology? I agree with the rounding bit.....IM was my absolute least favorite rotation in med school.
I hated rounding and the nitpicking over everything. I don't care which kind of test was performed to determine their serum sodium. I really don't care if the K+ is 3.4. I've long wanted to write the order for banana to bedside stat. 😉
I hated rounding and the nitpicking over everything. I don't care which kind of test was performed to determine their serum sodium. I really don't care if the K+ is 3.4. I've long wanted to write the order for banana to bedside stat. 😉

