- Joined
- Sep 10, 2006
- Messages
- 7
- Reaction score
- 0
Can family medicine physicians with adequate experience get jobs in ER's? Is there any sort of legal requirement mandating that ER physicians be boarded in Emergency Medicine?
Can family medicine physicians with adequate experience get jobs in ER's? Is there any sort of legal requirement mandating that ER physicians be boarded in Emergency Medicine?
I personally know two ER trained docs who after the excitement wore off after 10 years of shiftwork opened their own office. Now, their practice spectrum is pretty much that of a FM physician.
This is just hearsay, but I've heard that 10 years is about the average burnout rate for EM. It seems to be a specialty for the young...
The EM docs insist that they don't burn out and that it was just the 'misc' docs that covered ERs before them that burned out....
10 years is the average burnout rate for any physician.
Then I wonder why you see so many more older docs in nearly every field (especially FP--there's a ton of old geezers still in FP 🙂 ) but ER docs tend to be perpetually under 50? Maybe they make so much that they can retire early, but the FPs have to slave away into their 70s....🙄
but ER docs tend to be perpetually under 50?
A classmate of mine from med school who went into EM burned out after five. Now she's starting up a natural foods company.
I'm thinking of opening a subway. NO MORE INSURANCE BS.😡
Kent, where do you get this stuff?? You are kind of starting to scare me.
How 'bout a Quiznos? They got a pepper bar! 😉
![]()
Then I wonder why you see so many more older docs in nearly every field (especially FP--there's a ton of old geezers still in FP 🙂 ) but ER docs tend to be perpetually under 50? Maybe they make so much that they can retire early, but the FPs have to slave away into their 70s....🙄
Thought i'd chime in this em discussion. I think it is because of the relative 'newness' of the field, and also maybe you are at an academic institution where most of them have to be new? I think you find the really older ones in the rural areas and in about 15 years you will see ton of goldie oldies in the academic centers.
Also about the burnout, I think it really has to be due to the 'not being residency trained'. Most of the older generation that got board certified in EM came from a different field than EM because they got 'burned out' of that field, so I don't think its astonishing that they burned out of EM too. I think people that are going into residency now know what they are getting into beforehand so are able to tolerate it and the burn out rate is equal to other specialties....
either way i know jackbauer loves the ED!
ER is just way too demanding. I know of someone who grew up here, working about 30 hours per week in EM per week, and he is already sick of it. I have not heard of too much satisfaction in this career. Taking crap each and every single day from every specialist imagineable, I am a resident and I even got away with being excessively blunt in a rude way with an ER doc who did a half ass workup on an admission I was involved in, and wasted my time once when I was on call. The Ortho guys some of them are the worst, and ENT absolutely impossible to get a few of them to come into the ER here. Man I swear, you must have something in your genes to want to do EM, and it is still yet probably one of the top three at least competitive wise to get in. Makes no sense to me man. Money is nice though, that is about the only good thing that I will say about it. And shift work and no pager, aside from that, would say that the negatives outweigh the positives. And have not seen too many older EM docs, the ones that are happen to be arrogant as hell and not nice at all, thats just where I am from, that obviously is a personal thing here.
ER is just way too demanding. I know of someone who grew up here, working about 30 hours per week in EM per week, and he is already sick of it. I have not heard of too much satisfaction in this career. Taking crap each and every single day from every specialist imagineable, I am a resident and I even got away with being excessively blunt in a rude way with an ER doc who did a half ass workup on an admission I was involved in, and wasted my time once when I was on call. The Ortho guys some of them are the worst, and ENT absolutely impossible to get a few of them to come into the ER here. Man I swear, you must have something in your genes to want to do EM, and it is still yet probably one of the top three at least competitive wise to get in. Makes no sense to me man. Money is nice though, that is about the only good thing that I will say about it. And shift work and no pager, aside from that, would say that the negatives outweigh the positives. And have not seen too many older EM docs, the ones that are happen to be arrogant as hell and not nice at all, thats just where I am from, that obviously is a personal thing here.
Let's see, more money than FP, less paperwork, fewer hours...unless someone is really into being someone's doctor, or managing chronic diseases, why would they go into FP over EM (unless they really hate nights or drunks or something)
There's plenty of paperwork in EM, and most ER docs are working more hours than I am. Are they making more money? Probably (not that much more)...but then, I'm off every night, weekend, and holiday, and I have complete control over my schedule and how my office is staffed and run. Nobody in EM can say that.
Oh, yeah...and the "no drunks" part is good, too. 👍
Oh, and Ilike drunks, crack-******, and other colorful patients.
How 'bout a Quiznos? They got a pepper bar! 😉
![]()
Oh, and Ilike drunks, crack-******, and other colorful patients.
You forgot "aromatic"...it's a feast for the senses in the ED...🙂
On a side note, why do we continue to debate things that are clearly a matter of personal preference, as PBs post illustrates? Would we have long threads about whether green was better than blue, or chocolate better than vanilla? I hope not. Then why are we so obsessed with proving our specialty is the best?
It's so kindergarten, and I'm so tired of it....
We are all different and have different goals. What is the point of arguing one specialty is better than the other? I should hope that one will always be better than all the others for the person who chose it.
You know I saw those commercials. Still can't figure out what those creatures are.
On a side note, why do we continue to debate things that are clearly a matter of personal preference, as PBs post illustrates? Would we have long threads about whether green was better than blue, or chocolate better than vanilla? I hope not.
I was very interested to read this since I've been planning on EM but having 2nd thoughts. When it comes down to it though, I hate all the bickering between specialties. We're all doctors! I totally agree that we should just respect each other's personal decisions and leave it at that. To each their own, right?
Hmmm....Interesting to hear this from an FP resident. I don't ever recall seeing an FP resident on call who actually looked happy. Let's see, more money than FP, less paperwork, fewer hours...unless someone is really into being someone's doctor, or managing chronic diseases, why would they go into FP over EM (unless they really hate nights or drunks or something) I work with 5 FPs in an urgent care/minor free-standing ED. All 5 of them are being sent back to clinic next month and all of them are dreading it.
No contest, indeed...blue and chocolate. 😉
What is this even about? Who is better? Who is worse? Since when did a FP resident ever have an idea of the "life expectency" of an EM attending...maybe you knew one...or two? I mean really, everyone has a pretty bleak look at other specialties while in residency.
I hated FP residents (thought they were worthless), hated surgery (ego ego then a bit more ego), IM residents ("hi I'm a FMG, thank you for letting me in your wonderful country"), peds residents (too scared of anything with pubic hair to be useful), orthopedics ("no call unless bone broke is to be surgerized")...etc
But when you get out, eventually you all are friends. Yeah, I save their asses daily, and I still take some of their ****...but I ain't on call EVER and I made over 200k my first year out of residency...so life aint really that bad. I know that THEY know that if there is a difficult airway or something just plain bizarre...they will come to me.
This thread is way way out of hand.
Nah...it's all good.
Differing opinions are fine. Just no hair-pulling, no eye-poking, and no hitting below the belt. 😉
I think you get most of the bickering at academic medical centers where the egos have their own reserved parking spaces. I am at a community program (after leaving Duke, the Queen Mother of big egos) and people are a lot more level-headed and even-tempered.
I mean, seriously, at Duke the specialist you consult probably wrote the definitive work on the obscure disease that you missed in your differential. Of course he's going to snort and roll his eyes that you missed something as obvious as Bardet-Biedl Syndrome.