Re: St loan interest - point taken. It's amazing how tuition keeps going up near 10% a year, yet reimbursement continues to either level off or decline. Unfortunately, we control neither.
As an aside, I just looked at some financial aid calculators - it's pretty jaw dropping what the interest rate change in recent years has done in addition to increased graduating debt:
$200k, 30 years, 2.85% interest = $827/month
$250k, 30 years, 7% interest = $1663/month
http://www.finaid.org/calculators/scripts/loanpayments.cgi
If you saved the other $836/mo at 9% x 30 years = $1,100,045 difference between graduating now vs 4 years ago.
http://cgi.money.cnn.com/tools/savingscalc/savingscalc.html
Wow - is all I can say.
One thing that I have been told from former residents and attendings is to negotiate with the hospital with call. Fortunately, our Orthopedist colleagues have really taken the lead in this area. It is not unheard of for a group to charge $1000+ per night to have someone take call for the hospital in areas. Once you open the door, other surgeons are sure to say, "Well if the orthopedic surgeons are getting reimbursed, then we should be reimbursed, too!" Granted the call for an ENT/Urologist is far less than an Orthopod/GS. However, I know of several graduates in my field who get $400 a night to carry the pager. Q3 call = 120 calls/yr = an extra $48k per year. Even if a hospital is not paying your student loans, this will obviously go a long way to help mitigate that debt.
Obviously, as Dr Cox has previously said, this is all area and saturation dependent - In highly desirable areas, my guess is they would pay nothing,
Unfortunately, no one can have everything. While I would love to have student loan repayment, sign-on bonus, final year stipend, reimbursed call, buy-in rights to a surgicenter, practice owned CT-scanner, 12 months to partnership with a practice in San Diego, on the beach and with resident coverage, too. Reality tells me that medicine, like any other business, is supply and demand driven. Where the demand is high, certain concessions are made to bring providers in. Where there are more surgeons than the populations needs, one is lucky to get into a group, much less ask for the fringe benefits.
When the time comes to look at groups - look broadly. If you need to be in a specific area d/t family, spouses job, etc than your options will be far more limited. If you are more flexible, I'm sure you can find something that works out more favorably.
Good luck!
Leforte