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I’m gonna listen!I like to think of this incarnation of Simul as the "Joe Pera" version. Not quite UP and not quite a music teacher, but close. Of course, the world needs more Joe Peras.
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I’m gonna listen!I like to think of this incarnation of Simul as the "Joe Pera" version. Not quite UP and not quite a music teacher, but close. Of course, the world needs more Joe Peras.
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Cleaning and mowing grass is easy to outsource! Think providing elderly care and simultaneously being a colorectal surgeonWow. Is this for male physicians, female physicians or both ?
In an economic sense, we can use the Law of Comparative Advantage to sort this out.
It means a very fast typing lawyer should still hire a secretary. Or, a high earning physician outsources cleaning the house and lawn care.
Currently, I’m working full time and my wife doesn’t work outside the house. She is far busier than me.
Okay, but that has little do with doctoringCleaning and mowing grass is easy to outsource! Think providing elderly care and simultaneously being a colorectal surgeon
I think they are very different! Many of these well compensated jobs are still fully remote. Tons of people I know are doing hybrid - 2 days in the office 🙂 Full time back to the office for bankers is either 3 or 4 days in the building, 8 hours tops. You can run a solo household with these types of arrangements.Okay, but that has little do with doctoring
Like any job in the world that requires outside of the home work that gives you a food income requires the same thought process of whether both people work. I don’t see how lawyer, tech, i banker/finance, management consultant or the other sexy post-Ivy jobs are different
Mckinsey consultant working from home… Goldman Sachs analyst in PJs in a Jersey city condo…I think they are very different! Many of these well compensated jobs are still fully remote. Tons of people I know are doing hybrid - 2 days in the office 🙂 Full time back to the office for bankers is either 3 or 4 days in the building, 8 hours tops. You can run a solo household with these types of arrangements.
Mckinsey consultant working from home… Goldman Sachs analyst in PJs in a Jersey city condo…
when i read this my thought was yeah i dont think drew realizes how bad of a look this is for his program. Students if you are listening pay attention! Steinberg loves a good slave. I have said this before on here and been attacked. UCLA culture has always had plenty of “scut”.LOL pulling two separate residents because the service cant go uncovered for even a day... 🤔
Starting at the bottom, their hours in house have to rival any surgical internshipMckinsey consultant working from home… Goldman Sachs analyst in PJs in a Jersey city condo…
I take that maybe these people aren’t in your social circle?
I think no business is ballsy enough to work people this many crazy hours. Glad to be proven wrong.Starting at the bottom, their hours in house have to rival any surgical internship
you shouldnt even need to have an out of office email or have people "cross-cover" for 2 days. you are a resident with an attending rad onc.when i read this my thought was yeah i dont think drew realizes how bad of a look this is for his program. Students if you are listening pay attention! Steinberg loves a good slave. I have said this before on here and been attacked. UCLA culture has always had plenty of “scut”.
you shouldnt even need to have an out of office email or have people "cross-cover" for 2 days. you are a resident with an attending rad onc.
so happy i ran from academia when i finished
Academics needs an intervention. Im sure this is not new, but sitting here at 5 years out it is surprising how many of my peers have left their academic job. Almost all of them have left because they were treated like a workhorse or trash or both.
Editors constantly complain about the lack of people willing to work for free and then shame them when they wont. (Always hilarious)
Yesterday there was a viral video of a trainee's husband slapping an OBGYN at an academic conference for assaulting his wife.
You have to wonder if these people will ever reflect and realize they are the problem.
It wouldn’t surprise me if Mikey has close to zero clinical knowledge so needs a babysitter at all times. The guy sold a bunch of practices to 21c for tens millions and posed as a policy expert. Drew should come over from the va and cover him.you shouldnt even need to have an out of office email or have people "cross-cover" for 2 days. you are a resident with an attending rad onc.
so happy i ran from academia when i finished
Feel grateful i left the cesspool as quickly as possibleAcademics needs an intervention. Im sure this is not new, but sitting here at 5 years out it is surprising how many of my peers have left their academic job.
Have been told by chair during residency "Do you really want Dr. *** to go uncovered? That wouldn't be safe..." with an aghast expression on his face. To which I thought "... my point exactly..." Why is that dinosaur still in practice?It wouldn’t surprise me if Mikey has close to zero clinical knowledge so needs a babysitter at all times. The guys sold a bunch of practices to 21c for tens millions and posed as a policy expert. Drew should come over from the va and cover him.
Steinberg knows his clinical stuff, or at least did back in the day that he was my examiner for the mock oral boards that UCLA put on. I think his real talent is for business, at least among rad oncs.It wouldn’t surprise me if Mikey has close to zero clinical knowledge so needs a babysitter at all times. The guy sold a bunch of practices to 21c for tens millions and posed as a policy expert. Drew should come over from the va and cover him.
I agree, but what have the academic leaders of our field built over the last 20 years?I know I’m the minority and Steinberg is by no means perfect, I like the idea of successful builders rather than only lab people being department leaders
I know I’m the minority and Steinberg is by no means perfect, I like the idea of successful builders rather than only lab people being department leaders
Unfortunately they only cared about building their own academic centers and careers, not about the specialty at large once their grads went out into the real world and community practice, leading to what i suspect is the most toxic dichotomy in any specialty between community/private practice folks and academic/training center onesI know I’m the minority and Steinberg is by no means perfect, I like the idea of successful builders rather than only lab people being department leaders
My beef with Steinberg is his "let them eat cake" take on the specialty, which he tries to sell URM.I know I’m the minority and Steinberg is by no means perfect, I like the idea of successful builders rather than only lab people being department leaders
100% reasonableMy beef with Steinberg is his "let them eat cake" take on the specialty, which he tries to sell URM.
True, but he is in the worst job market in the country and pays faculty bottom dollar, despite his own million+ salary, and tens of millions in the bank. New faculty cant afford housing within 30 miles of UCLA without family help.100% reasonable
But they all, literally all, do it. He’s just more public facing
Unfortunately they only cared about building their own academic centers and careers, not about the specialty at large once their grads went out into the real world and community practice, leading to what i suspect is the most toxic dichotomy in any specialty between community/private practice folks and academic/training center ones
I think it goes both ways… and that is the problem. Pride precludes both sides from respecting those who don’t show any. No way out.Ive noticed that too. Academic med oncs are way more kind to their community colleagues than Rad Oncs. Surgeons too. Most of them proudly talk about their community colleagues, especially if they trained them.
Not sure why. I suspect this is long standing and started before I was around.
There is no "both sides" here... academic physician leadership has harmed our specialty in ways the old greedy community docs couldn't have imagined.
There are absolutely both sides.
As a new grad my choices were no partnership track employed physician vs. academics. What's the difference?
Sure there were plenty of nebulous partnership tracks nobody would put in writing that didn't exist. Or also the fake partnership tracks that they call "partner" but is just the same salary/bonus structure as anywhere and with "senior partners" making the big bucks that I was never going to join.
Not to say there aren't issues with academics. There absolutely are. But to paint this as one sided is crazy. Everyone is out to get junior rad oncs. I think equitable went out the window a decade ago.
Regarding the private world, I'm sick of seeing antiquated equipment being used incorrectly to bill modern treatment codes. Or private guys that treat rare stuff that they should refer out that they won't because they "treat everything that walks in the door" and immediately retreat to "well I'm just a lowly community doc" the second you question them. Or how about the docs that treat IMRT by having their dosimetrists contour everything? I get RT-DICOMs whenever possible from prior treatment courses, and I see some scary stuff, disease missed, OARs not contoured and overdosed, targets drawn improperly, etc.
But yeah what do I know, I specialize in one disease site at the mothership with all the latest and greatest equipment, see more of it than just about anyone else, write trials and papers on it, know and accrue for all the clinical trials, know what my colleagues are doing in that site, etc... Guess that makes me a bad doc since I don't treat everything.
The academic bashing on here gets to a ridiculous level sometimes. We should all respect one another as physicians who have different circumstances.
You are making my point… and I think you agree with me. Do you disagree that academic rad oncs don’t respect community rad oncs? Do you disagree that community rad oncs don’t respect academics?Community radoncs didn't flood training programs for cheap labor. Most 'good' community radoncs can outrun any academic site specific radonc because just think about it:
Your average "site specific" academic radonc does nothing but that. Imagine again you are a GU and do 90% prostate related care. You're telling me this clinician is outrunning the community doc who has to deal with everything?
Or, as my (now 'famous' academic radonc) former co-resident put it so well "If I do anything but X, I'd be committing malpractice"
There is no "both sides" here... academic physician leadership has harmed our specialty in ways the old greedy community docs couldn't have imagined.
Its not disrespect, its a reality. Nothing I said is factually incorrect, even if it is not politically correct.You are making my point… and I think you agree with me. Do you disagree that academic rad oncs don’t respect community rad oncs? Do you disagree that community rad oncs don’t respect academics?
The fact that you, as a community rad onc, think your disrespect is justified only further supports my argument.
You missed his point completely. Academics ruined the job market, not the community guys by ramping up slots while simultaneously doing research to reduce fractions, indications etcThe academic bashing on here gets to a ridiculous level sometimes. We should all respect one another as physicians who have different circumstances.
I am pretty sure I do my job today better than you would at first and you do your job today better than I would at first…Its not disrespect, its a reality. Nothing I said is factually incorrect, even if it is not politically correct.
Highly focused radonc academic specialists could not survive one week of busy practice.
And, while greed was (and still is, in some private groups) a factor in community practice, the academic/residency kerfuffle proved greed wasn't just in the community.
So the way I see it it ain't the same. Disagreement isn't disrespect.
Whatboutism may be for sale but...
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I've heard multiple people say they couldn't go back to treating everything after they have been site specific for awhile, even some pretty big namesI am pretty sure I do my job today better than you would at first and you do your job today better than I would at first…
In terms of efficiency, from many of the complaints I have seen on this forum about declining numbers in the community, this lowly lung cancer specialist has more patients on beam with 3 days in clinic than PPs in clinic 5 days a week.
Maybe I am wrong… maybe you guys in PP really are on a different level
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Wouldn’t ever want to do gyn, Peds or brachytherapy again… but I understand a lot of generalists avoid these as well.I've heard multiple people say they couldn't go back to treating everything after they have been site specific for awhile, even some pretty big names
You missed his point completely. Academics ruined the job market, not the community guys by ramping up slots while simultaneously doing research to reduce fractions, indications etc
If there wasn't such an oversupply of grads via expansion with simultaneous increase in observation/hypofx for many indications, things might be different now.I don't see all these private practices opening their arms with quality partnership track positions. All I see are no more partnership track or ridiculous times and low salaries to partner.
Yeah probably less of a problem now.Wouldn’t ever want to do gyn, Peds or brachytherapy again… but I understand a lot of generalists avoid these as well.
As for everything else, i think I would be confident approaching with econtour and a few months of running cases by colleagues. I imagine most specialists from my generation would feel similarly
This is always so interesting to me. Maybe because these people didn’t have a good wide generalist foundation on which to build. I could not treat a single prostate or breast for the next ten years but still be able, even ten years later, to treat a breast and prostate just great. I feel we are all smart cookies. Surely… absent dementia or brain injury… all of our residency teachings, residency clinical experience, and generalist board certifications are worth something/not worth anything.I've heard multiple people say they couldn't go back to treating everything after they have been site specific for awhile, even some pretty big names
I'm calling dumb on the PP vs academics conflict here. SDN is lucky to have significant input from academic attendings. There is no way I will have the depth of knowledge about a given site as a good academic doc. Whether this is clinically meaningful is a different question, and the answer is probably no for most patients.
While academics has its own intrinsic pathologies, PP is prone to greed, greed, greed. We all know it. We don't all practice it.
Just hoping the academic docs out there have time and support to do academics. Of course, what the community wants from academics are new indications or new therapeutics that they can themselves participate in. Most folks in the community are better staffed regarding docs than their colleagues in other fields. They are not clamoring for new trainees.
The academic docs who say they couldn't go back to treating everything are probably old and likely disproportionately notable. I'd have no problem hiring an academic ten or less years out from training, or even longer if they were doing stuff like H&N, GYN and lung. If you were just doing breast? Maybe no. At this point, there should be very few breast only attendings.
So, I watched the first episode on you tube.I like to think of this incarnation of Simul as the "Joe Pera" version. Not quite UP and not quite a music teacher, but close. Of course, the world needs more Joe Peras.
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Ha! Of course you are nothing like Joe Pera.So, I watched the first episode on you tube.
So weird!! Do I come off like that?
You do have to honor the for sale sign, tho
I'm starting to wonder if it isn't time for me to specialize down into a few organ sites. Currently I'm doing everything except prostate implants in a group of 5 docs. I think we have some room to focus down and still be able to cross cover.I've heard multiple people say they couldn't go back to treating everything after they have been site specific for awhile, even some pretty big names
Academics needs an intervention. Im sure this is not new, but sitting here at 5 years out it is surprising how many of my peers have left their academic job. Almost all of them have left because they were treated like a workhorse or trash or both.
Editors constantly complain about the lack of people willing to work for free and then shame them when they wont. (Always hilarious)
Yesterday there was a viral video of a trainee's husband slapping an OBGYN at an academic conference for assaulting his wife.
You have to wonder if these people will ever reflect and realize they are the problem.
I love the majority of my academic counterparts as much as I love the majority of my community counterparts. And some academics I don't love at all just as with my community counterparts.targets drawn improperly, etc.
We should all respect one another as physicians who have different circumstances.
Does this say it takes 5 generalists to equal 1 expert? Maybe this explains the oversupply!I love the majority of my academic counterparts as much as I love the majority of my community counterparts. And some academics I don't love at all just as with my community counterparts.
OOOOOOO - CONTOURING!
Looks like community docs contour just as poorly as expert academics:
"Conclusion: Multi-generalist-generated consensus ROIs met or exceeded expert-derived acceptability thresholds."
Interobserver agreement among multiple generalists or ...https://www.redjournal.org › article › fulltext
I'm calling dumb on the PP vs academics conflict here. SDN is lucky to have significant input from academic attendings. There is no way I will have the depth of knowledge about a given site as a good academic doc. Whether this is clinically meaningful is a different question, and the answer is probably no for most patients.
While academics has its own intrinsic pathologies, PP is prone to greed, greed, greed. We all know it. We don't all practice it.
Just hoping the academic docs out there have time and support to do academics. Of course, what the community wants from academics are new indications or new therapeutics that they can themselves participate in. Most folks in the community are better staffed regarding docs than their colleagues in other fields. They are not clamoring for new trainees.
The academic docs who say they couldn't go back to treating everything are probably old and likely disproportionately notable. I'd have no problem hiring an academic ten or less years out from training, or even longer if they were doing stuff like H&N, GYN and lung. If you were just doing breast? Maybe no. At this point, there should be very few breast only attendings.