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Hey guys. Does anyone know average hourly pay for locum hospitalist?
That's pretty much the going rate range here (CA) for no procedures, closed ICU... days closer to the lower end of this range, nights closer to the higher end.Agree. 120-150
Should be more for nights
Make sure they cover your malpractice WITH TAIL or it's not worth it
Agree. 120-150
Should be more for nights
Make sure they cover your malpractice WITH TAIL or it's not worth it
could you explain what with tail means? is it coverage even after you stop working for them?
Makes sense--but then what is the difference between claims w/ tail vs occurrence? Am I missing something?Yes. A claim based insurance is one where they cover malpractice only during the coverage period, unless you purchase a tail which extends the coverage period.
You can also get an occurrences insurance which will cover any occurrence of malpractice that occurs while you have their insurance.
Ie claims made = as long as you still have us we will pay, occurrences= as long as it occurred while you were covered we will pay
Makes sense--but then what is the difference between claims w/ tail vs occurrence? Am I missing something?
You could just ask the recruiters themselves. There are so many of them you will not have a hard time getting some concrete numbers out of them.what can I expect in a city like Champaign IL, with no ICU coverage and no procedures?
damn! the best i've gotten so far was 180...but desperate was the key too!The best I ever got was 230 an hour the night before july 4th at the VA. Caught them desperate. It was an easy 12 hours too.
damn! the best i've gotten so far was 180...but desperate was the key too!
as an IM hospitalist? or as intensivist?175-190 day shift 200 night with ICU coverage
i wanna know where you work...and are they looking for a few weeks of locums? 🙂as an IM hospitalist? or as intensivist?
Of course they want CC trained people to work there, they just don't want to PAY CC trained people to cover the ICUs.i didn't realize hospitalists coverage of ICU is so common. Do people not want CC trained to cover ICUs...?
There's not enough trained intensivists to cover the 1,000,001 tiny little hospitals that might have 4-6 bed ICUs in this country. Or even the moderate sized ICUs 24/7 (rather than just during daylight hours). Only the largest academic ICUs have in house intensivists 24/7, and even they often just have residents do it.i didn't realize hospitalists coverage of ICU is so common. Do people not want CC trained to cover ICUs...?
Been doing locum hospitalist gigs past 3 years in the Mid Atlantic region... usual rates in Maryland( with notoriously low physician salaries ) are minimum $150-160/hr dayshifts & $170-180/hr for nights, $200/hr for nights with ICU coverage. Quite possible to get additional $10-20/hr on these rates depending on years of experience, hospital need & location( the more remote the higher the rate ). I've received calls from smaller locums agencies regarding gigs in the Midwest & the initial rate offered was $190/hr for dayshifts. It's all about what you can negotiate & remember no amount is too high ...doesn't hurt to try. The key is avoiding the bigger locums agencies( higher overhead with higher middleman costs, hence lower rates offered to the physicians ).
$180-200 per hour in Northern California.
Much lower in Southern California
$ 140-160 at one Southern California shopDamn, that's right about at EM hourly rates. And this is in California? Impressive. Does anyone feel there is a bubble in hospitalist medicine right now?
$ 140-160 at one Southern California shop
Wow.Surgical PAs make 140/hr for moonlighting shifts at my institution in the northeast.
Really make you wonder what all the years of training 'doctors' go through is for.....
And this is at a large academic institution in a city not some rural community place where they proly make more.Wow.
Damn, that's right about at EM hourly rates. And this is in California? Impressive. Does anyone feel there is a bubble in hospitalist medicine right now?
EM hourly rates are north of 300 so not really close.
Surgical PAs make 140/hr for moonlighting shifts at my institution in the northeast.
Really make you wonder what all the years of training 'doctors' go through is for.....
Surgical PAs make 140/hr for moonlighting shifts at my institution in the northeast.
Really make you wonder what all the years of training 'doctors' go through is for.....
You do realize that surgical PAs do more just 'hold retractors' right?How is this possible? Do they bring in any particular skillset that is lacking among RNs, surgical techs, moonlighting residents, etc? I don't think PAs enjoy any particular licensing benefits over random Joe in the street that would artificially boost their compensation, so I find it hard to understand how they can get paid that much for holding the retractors. You'd think they could find warm bodies to do it for less.
You do realize that surgical PAs do more just 'hold retractors' right?
They round on pts, they are the ones that answer majority of pages, they sometime may do consults pending attending level of comfort, they put in chest tubes and other minor procedures on the floor, and theyre the ones that closes the patient majority of the time at the end of the surgical case.
Believe me, I dont think they deserve $140/hr for anything over 40hrs. Residents, such as myself, do everything they do, but work 80+hrs without being paid like they are.
Im actually angry that they make more than majority of primary care DOCTOR for 1/3 the training.
Because they'd have to pay physicians $200+/h to do it. And they won't. Those are the market forces at play.Full disclosure, I'm pre-clinical so have very little idea what surgical PAs do. Still, the question stands: what particular market forces are driving their hourly rates into the stratosphere? What exactly creates a situation where a PA makes more money, both in absolute terms and in hourly rates, than a physician? I don't get it. If there exists a demand for a warm body at an hourly rate that is higher than what a physician commonly earns, I would expect there to be plenty of physicians willing and able to fulfill that demand, so why are PAs chosen to be that warm body instead? It makes a complete mockery of the medical profession that physician assistants are chosen preferentially ahead of physicians for the more lucrative aspects of medicine.
Cause instead of seeing pts and writing FU notes, answer apges in the middle of the night, and other scut work, they rather pay PAs at 140/hr to do it.Full disclosure, I'm pre-clinical so have very little idea what surgical PAs do. Still, the question stands: what particular market forces are driving their hourly rates into the stratosphere? What exactly creates a situation where a PA makes more money, both in absolute terms and in hourly rates, than a physician? I don't get it. If there exists a demand for a warm body at an hourly rate that is higher than what a physician commonly earns, I would expect there to be plenty of physicians willing and able to fulfill that demand, so why are PAs chosen to be that warm body instead? It makes a complete mockery of the medical profession that physician assistants are chosen preferentially ahead of physicians for the more lucrative aspects of medicine.
Cause instead of seeing pts and writing FU notes, answer apges in the middle of the night, and other scut work, they rather pay PAs at 140/hr to do it.
Hey guys. Does anyone know average hourly pay for locum hospitalist?
when you guys cover the ICU do you have to manage the vent?