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I thought this would generate some discussion. I wanted to know which field was the easiest to get into that paid the most money. Is it anesthesia?
utlonghorn50 said:I thought this would generate some discussion. I wanted to know which field was the easiest to get into that paid the most money. Is it anesthesia?
utlonghorn50 said:Is it anesthesia?
doc05 said:nobody's making 400 in path these days.
*Survey includes base salaries, net income or hospital guarantees minus expenses January, 2002 - Present
SPECIALTY, Years 1-2 >3 Max
Allergy/ Immunology $158,000 $221,000 $487,000
Ambulatory $ 80,000 $112,000 $152,000
Anesthesiology: Pediatrics $ 283,000 $311,000 $378,000
Anesthesiology: General $207,000 $275,000 $448,000
Anesthesiology: Pain Management $315,000 $370,000 $651,000
Cardiology: Invasive $258,000 $395,000 $647,000
Cardiology: Interventional $290,000 $468,000 $811,000
Cardiology: Noninvasive $268,000 $403,000 $599,000
Critical Care $187,000 $215,000 $320,000
Dermatology $ 195,000 $308,000 $452,000
Emergency Medicine $192,000 $216,000 $295,000
Endocrinology $171,000 $187,000 $260,000
FP (with OB) $182,000 $204,000 $241,000
FP (w/o OB) $161,000 $135,000 $239,000
FP - Sports Medicine $ 152,000 $208,000 $363,000
FP - Urgent Care $ 128,000 $198,000 $299,000
Gastroenterology $265,000 $349,000 $590,000
Hematology/Oncology $181,348 $245,000 $685,000
Infectious Disease $154,000 $178,000 $271,000
Internal Medicine $154,000 $176,000 $238,000
IM (Hospitalist) $161,000 $172,000 $245,000
Medicine/Pediatrics $139,000 $168,000 $271,000
Medical Oncology $198,000 $257,000 $455,000
Neonatal Medicine $286,000 $310,000 $381,000
Nephrology $191,000 $269,000 $447,000
Neurology $180,000 $228,000 $345,000
Obstetrics/Gynecology $211,000 $261,000 $417,000
Gynecology $159,000 $213,000 $358,000
Maternal/Fetal Medicine $286,000 $322,000 $610,000
Occupational Medicine $139,000 $185,000 $290,000
Ophthalmology $138,000 $314,000 $511,000
Ophthalmology Retina $280,000 $469,000 $716,000
Orthopedic Surgery $256,000 $342,000 $670,000
ORS - Foot & Ankle $228,000 $392,000 $791,000
ORS - Hand & Upper Extremities $288,000 $459,000 $770,000
ORS - Hip & Joint Replacement $330,000 $491,000 $715,000
ORS - Spine Surgery $398,000 $670,000 $1,352,000
ORS - Sports Medicine $266,000 $479,000 $762,000
Otorhinolaryngology $194,000 $311,000 $516,000
Pathology $169,000 $321,000 $610,000
Pediatrics $135,000 $175,000 $271,000
Pediatrics - Cardiology $145,000 $282,000 $607,000
Pediatrics - Critical Care $196,000 $259,000 $398,000
Pediatrics - Hematology/Oncology $182,000 $217,000 $251,000
Pediatrics - Neurology $175,000 $189,000 $362,000
Physiatry $169,000 $244,000 $313,000
Podiatry $128,000 $168,000 $292,000
Psychiatry $149,000 $169,000 $238,000
Psychiatry - Child and Adolescent $158,000 $189,000 $265,000
Pulmonary Medicine + Critical Care $215,000 $288,000 $417,000
Radiation Oncology $241,000 $385,000 $787,000
Radiology $201,000 $354,000 $911,000
Rheumatology $179,000 $229,000 $378,000
Surgery - General $226,000 $291,000 $520,000
Surgery - Cardiovascular $336,000 $515,000 $811,000
Surgery - Neurological $354,000 $541,000 $936,000
Surgery - Plastic $237,000 $412,000 $820,000
Surgery - Vascular $270,000 $329,000 $525,000
Urology $261,000 $358,000 $619,000
utlonghorn50 said:I thought this would generate some discussion. I wanted to know which field was the easiest to get into that paid the most money. Is it anesthesia?
seth03 said:so family practice w/o OB gets a decrease in salary after your first 2 years out of residency?
speyeder said:Hmmm...I'm not sure I know what you mean. Can you be a little more blunt? 🙄
seth03 said:so family practice w/o OB gets a decrease in salary after your first 2 years out of residency?
Skip Intro said:No. Pathology.
You start slow, but after a few years you're making about $400+ on average. There's no call, there's no "pathological emergencies", it's 9 to 5, there's minimal patient contact, and you sit in a lab or office all day. And, it's relatively easy to get. Problem is, it can be extremely tedious and boring if you don't have the righ personality for it. Also, you'll get grilled during interviews (so I've heard) about why you are chosing Pathology as a career.
-Skip
dmdmd said:The job market for pathologists has always been dismal. Only a few earn more than 400. Stop daydreaming. Few pathologists start working at 9...
The gold mine is in Radiology and job opportunities are everywhere.
ItsGavinC said:I wouldn't put much stock into any of those numbers. Typically the only people who respond to those surveys are those who WANT people to know their numbers .
Tenesma said:radiology was super easy to get into about 7 years ago....
pathologists hit a ceiling of about 250k... the only way they can make bank is when they own their own labs - in which case the sky is the limit. (this is based on a very close friend who is a path. guy)
exgatr said:Watch out for Rads in the future. It's getting outsourced to overseas. I think it's popularity will drop pretty quickly.
Finally M3 said:exgatr; there was only one experiment from what I know of in regards to overseas outsourcing and that was with MGH. However, they ran into a medical-legal problem since the rads over there weren't US certified.
However, there are rumors they are trying to get around that by having the docs come here to get certified, then they will go back to India/wherever where the operating costs are much lower.
From my understanding, this was only supposed to be for PM hours when regular staff was unavailable to do reads.
And I think there will be more than enough images to go around; ever see how many patients are in line for the MRI/CT/US on your typical day at the hospital? Multiply that by the amount of older patients you will see in 10-15 years as the baby-boomers start getting sick. Rads will be getting better, not worse, in the near-term future.
Skip Intro said:No. Pathology.
You start slow, but after a few years you're making about $400+ on average. There's no call, there's no "pathological emergencies", it's 9 to 5, there's minimal patient contact, and you sit in a lab or office all day. And, it's relatively easy to get. Problem is, it can be extremely tedious and boring if you don't have the righ personality for it. Also, you'll get grilled during interviews (so I've heard) about why you are chosing Pathology as a career.
-Skip
daelroy said:Problem is pathology is semi-competitive. If I had to rank the top 5 easy to acquire/pays the most.
1 Anesthesiology
2 PM&R
3.ER- lots of DO's and IMG's match in this field, 250K; problem is you are capped after this. Unlikely to break 300K whereas Gas and PM&R can earn well over 300k.
4. Internal medicine then subspecialize in rheumotology or nephrology
5.Path
LOL, if you want to know the answer to this, check out any DO match list. Not to put down my kind but if you notice, a high percentage go into anesthesiology, ER and PMR. They are doing that for a reason; they are smart!
Finally M3 said:The drawback is Neurologists have hella high malpractice rates. Below Neurosurgeons and OBGYNs, but higher than just about everyone else. Weird statistic IMHO. 😛
Pinky said:Neurologists are rarely sued compared to many other medical specialties. However, the gravity of neurologic injuries is quite serious. So, when theses cases go to trial, there is a higher average payout per plaintiff verdict against neurologists than against any other specialty.
Some of the issues that I remember commonly bringing many neurologists to court were 1) the teratogenicity of the neuro drugs. 2) not giving tPA to patients who were candidates, 3) failing to diagnose a SAH when a patient came in with headache 4) not documenting that you told an epileptic patient that they shouldn't drive their car who then gets into an MVA, and so forth.
InductionAgent said:Path is certainly not any more competitive than anesthesiology. There was a higher percentage of unfilled spots in path than in gas, and a higher percentage of IMGs going into path, which is an even better marker of non-competitiveness than DO percentage.
EctopicFetus said:1 Anesthesia (Below avg board scores)![]()
2 PM&R (Please take the boards) 😀
3 IM then Nephro or Rheum (Boring... but easy to get.. a fellowship requires more effort to get) 😴
4 Path You only need 2 good years, then to the basement!![]()
5 ER Above avg board scores for the most part (nationally), good pay, short training, low work hours. 🙂
EctopicFetus said:1 Anesthesia (Below avg board scores)![]()
2 PM&R (Please take the boards) 😀
3 IM then Nephro or Rheum (Boring... but easy to get.. a fellowship requires more effort to get) 😴
4 Path You only need 2 good years, then to the basement!![]()
5 ER Above avg board scores for the most part (nationally), good pay, short training, low work hours. 🙂