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Once completeing residency in Canada is it possible just to work in the USA? Are there more tests/exams required? Are there only certain states one can work in?
Thanks!
Thanks!
BlondeCookie said:It's not as bad as you think. The problem isn't getting a residency in the US. The problem is getting a long-term visa to stay in the US. You have to pass the American licensing exams (USMLE) and you can apply for residency in any state. It's all accredited under LCME so you just have to make sure you pass the USMLEs. Good luck.
ssc_396 said:If you decide to practice in the USA you should be forced to pay back the entire cost of training you in Canada (~90K remaining even after the tuition you've paid). Canadian trained docs who leave make me mad. If you want to be in the US get your MD there as well.
ssc_396 said:If you decide to practice in the USA you should be forced to pay back the entire cost of training you in Canada (~90K remaining even after the tuition you've paid). Canadian trained docs who leave make me mad. If you want to be in the US get your MD there as well.
BlondeCookie said:It's not as bad as you think. The problem isn't getting a residency in the US. The problem is getting a long-term visa to stay in the US. You have to pass the American licensing exams (USMLE) and you can apply for residency in any state. It's all accredited under LCME so you just have to make sure you pass the USMLEs. Good luck.
ssc_396 said:If you decide to practice in the USA you should be forced to pay back the entire cost of training you in Canada (~90K remaining even after the tuition you've paid). Canadian trained docs who leave make me mad. If you want to be in the US get your MD there as well.
BlondeCookie said:a rule requiring repayment of tuition based on not working in Canada smacks of total socialism. And I disagree with socialism as the basis for any governmental policy.
trustwomen said:You must not be Canadian - it is the basis for MOST governmental policy here... 😉
I likes me the socialism. I'm happy to pay the taxes.
f_w said:canada has exactly the physician shortage it deserves. for decades, overseas graduates where p*##^d upon by the provinical colleges and the canadian immigration authorities. now that the #*$# hits the fan I have a hard time to feel sorry for you guys. canadian physicians moving south is an expression of free trade. if your goverment wanted to impair this free flow of the workforce, they would be free to impose a mandatory pay-back period)
trustwomen said:You must not be Canadian - it is the basis for MOST governmental policy here... 😉
I likes me the socialism. I'm happy to pay the taxes.
BlondeCookie said:IMO, there are more fair and effective policies that can work at getting docs in rural areas than the extremist "pay us back if you don't practice here" view.
although for some there are questions of real equivalency in training (many overseas graduates are from developing countries), as well as language skills and communication skills (yes, they are different skills).
I don't like the idea of making doctors work X number of years in a certain place as a condition of training (leads to angry/resentful doctors and therefore poor medical care).
Being the only socialists on the block (i.e. North America) does have its inherent problems...
trustwomen said:Oh, I wasn't talking about rural areas. I just meant staying in Canada - as long as Canadian-trained docs are contributing to this society and this economy, they're cool with me. The rural areas problem could probably be solved by just increasing the "rural pay bonus". I think it would go over much better than the "urban penalty" they did here in Quebec (30% LESS than standard reimbursement if you work in the city - it was a disaster).
It would be interesting to discuss the pros and cons of free trade, but I suspect that would require a new thread.
Sorry if I sounded judgemental, that wasn't my intent.
f_w said:Overseas trained doctors are required to pass the same exams as the locals and they are (for the most part) required to repeat their clinical training. When it comes to training positions, they are required to compete with US grads on a fairly even field. While residencies still prefer US grads, well qualified FMGs find their way into clinical training every year.
While some xenophobic right wing radicals might disagree, nobody has ever been able to show a difference in the quality of care delivered by FMGs vs US or canadian medical graduates within the US medical system. It is a non-issue.
Canada on the other hand didn't give overseas docs an opportunity to compete on an even footing with the locals. FMGs where (and in most provinces still are) forced to take the scraps, the family practice slots in the backwoods and the psychiatry positions.
Also, there is a tremendous amount of protectionism at work to keep US trained physicians with foreign medical school diplomas out of canada. (Unless you limit your practice to some idyllic place like '100 mile house, BC', it is extremely arduous to get your foreign medical school and US residency training recognized for a unrestricted license in any of the canadian provinces). The blame for this restriction in the flow of well trained physicians from the US to canada falls squarely on the provincial colleges of physicians and surgeons.
f_w said:How about paying competitive salaries or making modern equipment available ?
f_w said:I have seen and lived under socialism, and it isn't pretty.
BlondeCookie said:Wow. Lots of hate and judgemental attitudes going around. Listen, you guys don't even know the original poster. So, don't hate.
To the OP, keep your head up. Canada is a fabulous place and so is the USA. If you want to go to the US, they will welcome you with open arms. Don't worry about the people that are going to pass judgment on you. Stay true to yourself and to the profession of helping people. You will have to pass the 3 parts of the USMLEs to practice in the US. Also, each individual US State has different rules on how much post-graduate training they will accept from non-USA residencies. So, you would have to contact the US state licensing board for their requirements. Good luck.
ssc_396 said:No ... where's the hate and judging? There's nothing like that here. And there's nothing meant to be directed to the OP. He/She just opened a can of worms on something I feel strongly about.
I love the USA and I love Canada. On an individual basis there is little difference between us in my experience. As I've said before Canadians are just unarmed Americans with healthcare.
ie social healthcare is one of the only things that makes Canada different. And I am a firm supporter of this small difference. I see retaining Canadian docs as just one way that we can preserve this difference. Yes, there are a zillion others but perhaps another thread should be opened if you want to argue about those.
ssc_396 said:As I've said before Canadians are just unarmed Americans with healthcare.
ssc_396 said:I like socialism and everything that goes with it. Hence I will do my MD and stay in Canada (and I do currently have the option of going south ). But ignoring all the pros and cons of socialism here's my big issue with docs leaving...
If you are a Canadian trained doc and you head south then MY tax dollars paid for YOUR education and I am not able to access what I paid for.
Would you feel good about paying to build a road in the USA out of Canadian tax dollars? I doubt it.
It's the exact same thing. End of story.
I don't care if you're unhappy with how the government treats you etc...
You should not have the RIGHT to leave if you were paid for by me and my 30 million or so Canadian brothers and sisters. You are my road and I want you here.
If you want that right pay for it yourself.
docbill said:Blondcookie, what is your background.. meaning east cost.. west coast... undergrad ... grad... etc... just wondering where you are coming from and where you may of gotten some of your ideas (just a thought since sometimes it depends about location).. I am BC raised, then Quebec, then finally Ontario... and I notice a huge difference in thinking in every place.
ssc_396 said:it bums me out to see ones leave who do want to stay, like docbill. I'd be willing to guess that many Canadians who are forced to head south pre-MD would rather stay in Canada, get their MDs, and practice in rural places for a few years than not do an MD in Canada at all.
However, you say that IMGs have to repeat clinical training in the U.S., so why not have the same requirement here (i.e. must redo residency in Canada)? Maybe we just need more residency slots overall.
Good idea. Although I think our salaries are already competitive with every country except the U.S., no?
f_w said:I don't know where that nonsense idea that canadian medschool graduates owe anything to the canadian people comes from ? By that twisted logic, electrical engineers should be restricted from leaving the country as well.
If you borrow money from banks to pay for your US education do you need to pay them back? Yes. Why do you think that owing a country who paid for your education is any different.
. You get an education because your parents paid for it with sky-high taxes. What you do with it is up to you.Canada views education as more of a right
f_w said:Because . You get an education because your parents paid for it with sky-high taxes. What you do with it is up to you.
f_w said:Most of the canadian economy lives in a symbiontic relationship with the US economy, why should the healthcare sector be any different ?
trustwomen said:-Because the Canadian health care system is public and single-payer and the U.S. health care system is private and profit-based. They are fundamentally different. The other sectors of our economy are capitalistic and therefore can compete adequately with the corresponding sector in the U.S. (Although that is another debate, namely that of free trade, which I do not adore either). We have made the decision that capitalist health care, on the other hand, is not in our collective best interest. And having seen U.S. health care up close, I can vouch that we are right.
-Because U.S. doctors earn what they do partly because they have such massive (200-300K) student loans, and that's just the tuition. That is certainly the way they justify it to the public. The extra education deserves the extra salary not only because of the years invested, but because of the debt incurred. I cannot justify the same salary for a physician with 60K in tuition debt (max).
-Because an electrical engineer is not getting as heavily subsidized (although I'll agree with you that they are getting subsidized.) Actually, come to think of it, I'm not entirely against the idea of making electrical engineers pay it back also.
I'm sick of Canadian doctors complaining that they can't do everything that American doctors do (fancy equipment, procedures, etc.). Newsflash: only the doctors who treat the wealthy get to do that down there. Those who deal with the uninsured and underinsured just WISH they could vaccinate a child without taking food money from his parents, i.e. they wish they were you. That's why there is a fairly large American group called "physicians for universal healthcare" (I think that's the name).
I agree that we need to invest more in equipment. I'm not even against a two-tier system, as long as that lower, single-payer tier is of very good quality (European-style). But if we consider "first-world medicine" to be only the cutting-edge stuff seen by those who treat the wealthy in the U.S., then it's worth noting that most Americans have no access to "first-world medicine" either.
It is really a problem being a socialist country so close to, and sharing a language with, the U.S. However, some would say that this means we need to abandon our values and principles - I disagree. We need to find creative ways to stay afloat. The "two-track" tuition (for those who stay and those who leave) is one.
cheer_up said:Hey Blondecookie,
I don't think ssc_396 is expressing a hate and judgemental attitude at all. He/she has got a point. What he/she is saying is very true, even though it may sound harsh to you.
SomeGuy said:Heck, since medical education is worth so much more than its cost due to the value of the license, why not make medical education in Canada ridiculously expensive, but pay the docs more. This way, we can profit (ie: like a real capitalist, not one that just complains about policies that don't benefit them) off the docs that leave Canada, while not changing the situation at all for docs that stay?
SomeGuy said:Heck, since medical education is worth so much more than its cost due to the value of the license, why not make medical education in Canada ridiculously expensive, but pay the docs more. This way, we can profit (ie: like a real capitalist, not one that just complains about policies that don't benefit them) off the docs that leave Canada, while not changing the situation at all for docs that stay?
Why would you _have_ to? It really depends on how its structured. It could be structured as a signing bonus for new grad docs paid every year over 10/20/30 years or the like. The only losers in all of this would be those that leave to the USA. It'd even the level of the playing field for a Canadian grad choosing between Canada and the US, because now the salary gap will narrower.trustwomen said:-Because you'd have to start paying them more all at once, meaning that those who got the cheap education would make out like bandits at taxpayers' expense.
What part of guaranteed jobs upon graduation for Canadian grads in Canada did you not agree with? Let alone the fact that every chartered bank in Canada will throw a nearly limitless amount of money at low rates at a medical student because their very own risk-analysts (actuaries) agree with me. I just talked with a chartered bank branch manager that does the loans for UofToronto professional student, and he said that as long as you don't have anything horribly derogatory on your credit report (like a bankruptcy), you'd get the good interest rates and the financing that you'd need.trustwomen said:-Because making education of any kind ridiculously expensive makes it less accessible for the poor. Before you answer "financial aid", please note that financial aid is also available in the U.S. (one could argue more available) but almost all the med students come from rich families. As do a higher proportion of undergrad students.
Well, the idea is that every dollar you save/earn by charging higher tuition, you put into reimbursements, so there is no net increase in cost to the government. This works out really well because both health care costs and medical education are paid for by the provincial governments. And like I said, it really works out well this way if you structure it in the signing bonus way I suggested before.trustwomen said:-Because, and this is the biggie, paying doctors a lot more would VASTLY increase health care costs in our already strained single-payer system. Far more than would be recouped from removing the education subsidy. Just look at how many doctors we have vs. how many med students we have every year!
Because the Canadian health care system is public and single-payer and the U.S. health care system is private and profit-based. They are fundamentally different.
-Because U.S. doctors earn what they do partly because they have such massive (200-300K) student loans, and that's just the tuition.
The extra education deserves the extra salary not only because of the years invested, but because of the debt incurred. I cannot justify the same salary for a physician with 60K in tuition debt (max).
-Because an electrical engineer is not getting as heavily subsidized (although I'll agree with you that they are getting subsidized.)
Newsflash: only the doctors who treat the wealthy get to do that down there. Those who deal with the uninsured and underinsured just WISH they could vaccinate a child without taking food money from his parents, i.e.
they wish they were you. That's why there is a fairly large American group called "physicians for universal healthcare" (I think that's the name).
to be only the cutting-edge stuff seen by those who treat the wealthy in the U.S., then it's worth noting that most Americans have no access to "first-world medicine" either.
Why do what the US is already doing in this regard? Because it has worked wonderfully for what we're trying to talk about here, keeping the people we paid (at a loss) to train. I'm not suggesting an all-out move to all of their systems or even pushing tuition up to a cost recovery plus system, but I'm saying that the idea of charging a high relatively unsubsidized tuition, and then paying them more after to make up for it, results in less loss of the people you trained.ssc_396 said:Why do we need to do that in Canada when it's already done in the US? And that's exactly the point. If that's what you believe in then move to the US right off the bat. I have absolutely no problem with this.
The problem is that their education is relatively unsubsidized. There's a great number of doctors in the US that are practicing and benefitting off of our Canadian backs, and that's a problem. What I want here (and its not to become a doctor of any kind) is to avoid paying to train people that should benefit me that'll end up leaving.ssc_396 said:It's just as easy (some might say easier) for Canadians to get into med school in the US so if that's the life you want have at er'.
I never said anything about putting up barriers to foreign grads in any way shape or form. They're good doctors, and so are we.ssc_396 said:Similarly, I think Canada should welcome Americans who want to practice in Canada after they receive their subsidized education.
What you expected isn't happening, and I really have no issues with paying taxes for a reasonable quality of life, but I sure am against the squandering of tax revenue.ssc_396 said:I'll be happy to fork 1/2 of my wages over so that others have a reasonable quality of life. And I'll expect that the people whose education I contribute to remain here to give back what I gave them.
f_w said:And only an even smaller minority advocates for a goverment mismanaged system. 'Universal healthcare' is a status that can be achieved by other means than a price-controlled socialist benefit system (ideally by having an economy strong enough to provide every american with a job paying well enough that he can choose to purchase health insurance).
You, like me, believe that better healthcare can be achieved without socialist policies. Others, believe that socialist controls have to be in place for adequate access to healthcare.
BlondeCookie said:And to all those you are interested to know my background, saying it would be helpful.. Helpful for what? Can you not judge an opinion and have a discussion on a topic w/o going into the details of a user's personal history? To me, that is highly preferrable, because in the context of this post it has been assumed that I must not be a natural-born Canadian just because my beliefs are in the minority. It's a bit insulting. I love Canada. So, if you have to judge a person by where they are from and not based on their ideas, then I have no business talking to you.
f_w said:I think some degree of goverment intervention will be necessary to achieve near universal coverage. But that doesn't mean we have to abandon the entire private/public system in favor of a socialist distribution model. The only areas currently not properly covered are small independent contractors and low-wage employees of small corporations. A combination of subsidized state sponsored health insurance pools and tax penalties for people who choose not to get insurance (and employers who don't offer it) should help us to cover that group. We don't have to pour out the baby with the bathwater.