Finished residency in June 2017, now four months in to my first private practice job. I remember gaining some good knowledge over the years on SDN, figure it is a good time to pay it back. Ask me anything yall
Finished residency in June 2017, now four months in to my first private practice job. I remember gaining some good knowledge over the years on SDN, figure it is a good time to pay it back. Ask me anything yall
1)Do you feel like your residency did a good job of preparing you for private practice?Finished residency in June 2017, now four months in to my first private practice job. I remember gaining some good knowledge over the years on SDN, figure it is a good time to pay it back. Ask me anything yall
Hi, thank you for your generous offer to advise! And congrats to your new job 🙂
I have a broad question as a current prelim IM intern: What do you think I should take away most out of my IM year in preparation for CA-1 and beyond? For context, I'm in a ward heavy program with 4.5 months of general wards, 3.5 months of MICU, 1 month CCU; no other scheduled consults or any anesthesia month. Thanks!
1)Do you feel like your residency did a good job of preparing you for private practice?
2)Do you feel like you know more, less or about the same as your co workers?
3)If you have sizable loans are you paying them off quickly?
THANKS! and congrats!
so on my residency interview rounds, obviously step scores are paramount...but how much did your (step 3, basic, ITE) scores play into hiring? is this something that you lead with or is it assumed that by the time you get to the point of interviewing, you've cleared these to satisfaction? do they even go on a CV?
did you get faculty mentorship/business connections to help you search or was it more of a cold-calling type of situation?
how was your actual interview process? multiple days? extreme "negotiation"? was there wining and dining? ive heard that there is, especially if you're a "big fish, small pond" candidate..but that might be folklore.
What part of the country are you in ?
What is your mix of supervision and doing your own cases?
Do you have a say in what kind of cases you do ?
...I interviewed for two jobs- both of which had very similar interview experiences. I was taken out with my wife to a nice, local restaurant with a few other anesthesiologists, the group president/CEO and casually got to know them. They were mostly selling the practice during the dinner at both places, but I treated as a residency interview dinner. One place footed the bill for airfare and put us up in a high end hotel. The following day was meeting with HR directors to go over benefits/pay/etc, touring the hospital(s), meeting some other staff. I was left in rooms with anesthesiologists to pick their brain for maybe 15 mins at a time. I definitely took advantage of that time and asked some tough questions.
appreciate the info! do you mind sharing examples of the questions you asked?
True true but to add. How much are you making and many hours are u pulling in each week to make that income.How much you making? That's the only important question.
As much regional as possible - very useful and something to differentiate you from the older docs who may not have had as much training using US.Is there anything you wish you did different CA3 year to better prepare you for working out in the real world?
Haha well it's essentially eat what you kill but probably around $400-500k/year minus buy-in. That's 1ish weekend a month, 1 full night of call/week with some longer days mixed in.How much you making? That's the only important question.
I am originally from the general area and knew it was a quality practice and hospital. I didn't necessarily have connections other than "Hey I'm from around here". I cold called both places I interviewed at and both were very receptive. It's always worth a 3 minute call to see if a job is available for you!How did you find the job? Contacts? Cold calling? Online? Other? @noise115
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To add, that is including the cost of insurance/'mandatory' retirement/malpractice/disability/etc...Haha well it's essentially eat what you kill but probably around $400-500k/year minus buy-in. That's 1ish weekend a month, 1 full night of call/week with some longer days mixed in.
To add, that is including the cost of insurance/'mandatory' retirement/malpractice/disability/etc...
Hours worked are similar to residency, just no lecture in the morning, no preop-ing inpatient's afterward. I get in around 6:45 for any case. Leave around 3-5pm most days I'm not on call.
must have not been a work horse residency.
As much regional as possible - very useful and something to differentiate you from the older docs who may not have had as much training using US.
Looking back, I think I (as many residents do) get caught up in doing the biggest, baddest cases out there. What gets forgotten is simple skills and fundamentals you learn as a CA-1, such as smooth extubations, safe inductions, etc. Work on those and try to be as independent as possible.
That's funny considering another active thread is touting my current program as a workhorse program and those are our hours.
It was probably middle of the road...like most residencies it was highly dependent on which rotation I was on.must have not been a work horse residency.
Obviously being proficient in all regional techniques is desirable but do you find yourself using or expected to know some of the more "advanced" blocks like QL or lumbar plexus? I never saw the partners at the hospital I'm working for next year doing them but it's my understanding they're relatively new
@noise115 Thanks for the info! It seems like you're pretty happy with your set up thus far. Do you find that your other residents in your class feel similar? Also, what brought you into straight private practice as opposed to a fellowship? What fellowship do you feel is most marketable right now?
To add, that is including the cost of insurance/'mandatory' retirement/malpractice/disability/etc...
Hours worked are similar to residency, just no lecture in the morning, no preop-ing inpatient's afterward. I get in around 6:45 for any case. Leave around 3-5pm most days I'm not on call.
Those are some ridiculously amazing residency hours. Jealous!
How do you do your 'smooth extubations'? Do you just pull them deep?
Does your job have partnership track or are you making what you do for rest of your life if you work there?
What is CVC? Central venous catheter? Like line placements and stuff?
What in your opinion are complex crani/spine, obs that residents should be doing? I'm at a large OB, neurosurg, spine center but most of them feel very straight forward. It feels like the "complex " OBs are done by Ob fellow or cardiac anesthesiologists. (the ones requiring embolizations in IR before going to OR for C sections.. or the ones with bad heart failure and phtn). And for cranies, I would love to do some awake crani but we barely ever do any here.. other than that they all seem the same.. what complex cranis are you referring to? (I'm trying to decide soon if i should do a fellowship or not)
curious to what makes a program a workhorse program. I dont even think we get close to 80 hours a week here. A bad week with no call is right around 60 hours, but some people think its too much lol
It's all opinion. Workhorse in my opinion is program puts you to work a lot more than educating. You dont need to work 80 hrs a week. If you are stuck in the hospital for 70 hrs a week, how many people are going home to read? How beneficial is it for a resident to do his/her 200th lap chole? On residency interviews programs often talk about how many cases they do a year, but often people forget those institutions are also the ones w a large residency class + fellows. I'm actually a bit jealous of the small programs now with 5 residents who get assigned to cool/educational cases instead of just having a program staff a resident into almost every room for cheap labor so attendings can double cover.
Those are some ridiculously amazing residency hours. Jealous!
How do you do your 'smooth extubations'? Do you just pull them deep?
Does your job have partnership track or are you making what you do for rest of your life if you work there?
What is CVC? Central venous catheter? Like line placements and stuff?
What in your opinion are complex crani/spine, obs that residents should be doing? I'm at a large OB, neurosurg, spine center but most of them feel very straight forward. It feels like the "complex " OBs are done by Ob fellow or cardiac anesthesiologists. (the ones requiring embolizations in IR before going to OR for C sections.. or the ones with bad heart failure and phtn). And for cranies, I would love to do some awake crani but we barely ever do any here.. other than that they all seem the same.. what complex cranis are you referring to? (I'm trying to decide soon if i should do a fellowship or not)
curious to what makes a program a workhorse program. I dont even think we get close to 80 hours a week here. A bad week with no call is right around 60 hours, but some people think its too much lol
I think my program was middle of the pack. 0545ish-1700 on noncall days. One day a week 0545-1900. One 1500-0700 night/week. Two weekends a month. Obviously CT, transplant and ICU, etc were a little more time intensive. But overall probably 65hours/week. Workhorse to me has more to do with what you do while you're at work than hours.
Those are some ridiculously amazing residency hours. Jealous!
How do you do your 'smooth extubations'? Do you just pull them deep?
Does your job have partnership track or are you making what you do for rest of your life if you work there?
What is CVC? Central venous catheter? Like line placements and stuff?
What in your opinion are complex crani/spine, obs that residents should be doing? I'm at a large OB, neurosurg, spine center but most of them feel very straight forward. It feels like the "complex " OBs are done by Ob fellow or cardiac anesthesiologists. (the ones requiring embolizations in IR before going to OR for C sections.. or the ones with bad heart failure and phtn). And for cranies, I would love to do some awake crani but we barely ever do any here.. other than that they all seem the same.. what complex cranis are you referring to? (I'm trying to decide soon if i should do a fellowship or not)
Are those hours really that amazing? What are yours?
One place was willing to negotiate small things (moving expenses, a small signing bonus), the other negotiated nothing. Pay is hard to negotiate in anesthesia as most practices reimburse based on units produced, which is hard to change between providers.
Overall very pleasant experiences.
Please refrain from calling yourself a “provider”. If you will not respect your education and training, nobody will.
Sorry to offend you. That was not my intent. I’m just trying to maintain the distinction btw midlevels and physicians. If we refer to ourselves in a generic term like the midlevels and administrators refer to us, then we continue to blur the line btw the two. With midlevels claiming that they are equal or even better than you, no matter what your training is, you are just making their claim more believeable since you both are called “provider”.My goodness, this is why I avoid SDN and will probably continue to do so. Just relax a little, it's an online forum. My training is well respected because I am good at what I do and hold myself in high esteem, not because I flaunt that I am a physician. I am just trying to have a nice conversation and help residents, who are in the position I was in a last year to ease the transition.
Haha well it's essentially eat what you kill but probably around $400-500k/year minus buy-in. That's 1ish weekend a month, 1 full night of call/week with some longer days mixed in.
That's on the high end among starting pp jobsDo you feel like that offer was among the highest available out there or did you come across jobs with even greater earning potential?
Do you feel like that offer was among the highest available out there or did you come across jobs with even greater earning potential?
Sorry to offend you. That was not my intent. I’m just trying to maintain the distinction btw midlevels and physicians. If we refer to ourselves in a generic term like the midlevels and administrators refer to us, then we continue to blur the line btw the two. With midlevels claiming that they are equal or even better than you, no matter what your training is, you are just making their claim more believeable since you both are called “provider”.
And trust me, your training is only respected by you.
It is your actions, your performance, and how you carry yourself that is respected. Training is low on that scale. Everyone has what they claim to be excellent training, even the midlevels. Back to the Dunning-Kruger Effect.
Jobs in the northeast are around 250k-300k so op is balling.
No offense taken,I understand and respect your sentiment. Sometimes you just need to chill and realize I am just having a casual conversation with other like-minded individuals. I assume no one respects
Why do I need to “chill”? All I did was ask you politely to refrain from calling yourself a provider. It was for your own good as much as it is for the good of the medical profession.No offense taken,I understand and respect your sentiment. Sometimes you just need to chill and realize I am just having a casual conversation with other like-minded individuals. I assume no one respects.
Why do I need to “chill”? All I did was ask you politely to refrain from calling yourself a provider. It was for your own good as much as it is for the good of the medical profession.
No offense taken,I understand and respect your sentiment. Sometimes you just need to chill and realize I am just having a casual conversation with other like-minded individuals. I assume no one respects
I would say if you're making 250k pre-tax then either the market is highly competitive or you're getting boned, unfortunately. Again, co-residents of mine in Northern California (not SF), Denver, Minneapolis, PNW, etc are making ~350K/year or potentially more per their word. Could be vastly different on the east-coast - I have no exposure to the job market there.