Some of the misconceptions about the medical profession posted in this thread are disturbing. Many physicians I have worked with did not fully pay off their student loans until their early forties, especially in primary care specialties. If premed students would just do some research they would realize that a significant number of doctors are quite frustrated with the profession at this point.
Here are some excerpts from the physician's blog site
www.kevinmd.com/blog
I wouldn't even think of going into medicine. All of your concerns are huge and will only be worse. I have no faith that government can make any fundamental changes to improve things. Look at how the government has bungled social security reform, immigration reform, hurricane Katrina, the current tax code, etc... Health care is a thousand times more complex than those issues.
I am 42 years old and I still enjoy it as a career and have resigned myself to the fact that my path is set. It is too late for me to jump ship, although I am exploring opportunities to decrease patient care hours even at the expense of less income. I am in a high risk specialty and have had to endure 4 lawsuits that take years until exoneration. I have some brilliant and smart children but I will not offer much encouragement towards a career in medicine.
# posted by chuck : 9:30 AM
I am also in a high risk specialty, Emergency Medicine. I cannot leave because I currently support several family members, though I have cut my hours over the years. For me it is the Liability crisis. If I worked in a Pizzeria and I needed to earn a few extra bucks, I could just "pick up some overtime". In Emergency Medicine I have to think that every extra patient I see could be a lawsuit so I can't do extra shifts. What's remarkable to me is that in the past 3 months TWO of my colleagues quit to go into other fields. One is leaving medicine Entirely for an Office Job. She had only been a doc for 3 years. She got tired of the liability, and the fact that it's gotten so busy she can't PEE when she wants to and doesn't get a lunch break, like the rest of the world.
# posted by Anonymous : 10:45 AM
The decent (NOT rich) salary I get from busting my hump caring for patients sure as hell isn't worth it anymore. I'm in a pulmonary/critical care practice, and between the level of stress in caring for increasingly sick and complex patients, increasing numbers of times I have to come into the hospital after hours, the increasing number of difficult to deal with families, the stress of thinking that every patient you see may sue you (or to be threatened with lawsuits by families), the decreasing level of reimbursement, the increasing costs of overhead (not just malpractice) and with knowing that this incompetent Congress and Presidency can't (or won't) fix our healthcare woes, I'm looking to get the hell out of this profession. To continue this job means I'll be looking at an earlier grave. I'm 54 years old now, and while some may consider it too late to get out, I'm doing this to protect my sanity and my health.
# posted by ismd : 11:10 AM
Anon 12:04,
No, actually, it never was about an easy way to make money, despite the public's continued misperception about our salaries and motivation. It's everything else that goes with the job that's getting tiresome. And there's no way I'm gonna stop having temper tantrums, as you so fondly call them, not when my profession is being raped and pillaged by lawyers, the government and an uncaring public. There's one thing you fail to realize - healthcare in this country is going down the tubes, and it's citizens like yourselves, who don't have a clue as to what we go through on a daily basis, who are enabling the impending disasters in healthcare delivery. Yet when it's your insurance company who denies your medicine or your procedure or your MRI, it's US you whine to, and expect us to fix the problem. You know what? It ISN'T my problem, but yours, because it's YOUR insurance plan that you never bothered to understand.
If you think we're merely whining about our salaries, you're wrong. However, I do have a right to "whine", as you put it, when the profession I used to love goes down the tubes and you guys think it's all our fault. I'm entitiled to "whine" when I work in the only profession in this country NOT allowed to increase prices to compensate for increasing overhead. I'm entitled to whine when I get threatened with lawsuits by difficult to deal with families who want me to override their 98 year old family member's living will which says "do nothing". I'm entitled to "whine" when patients call with nonsense complaints they've had for months, and demand immediate office visits, or worse, call with these same chronic complaints in the middle of the night. I can whine when insurance companies deny reimbursements on a whim, or lose the claim my office submitted for the fifth time.
I'm no longer seeing Medicaid patients because I lose money every time I do, and that doesn't make me a money grubber or a dishonorable public servant, as some of the public would believe. I soon won't be seeing Medicare Patients with Medicaid secondary insurance because, in my state, I don't get paid the 20% Medicare allows. Medicine is a business, not a charity, and while I don't like cutting back on patients, it's a financial reality. If I don't make money, then I'm not in business.
I'm frustrated and disillusioned. I do not know one single M.D. who is happy right now, and many are actively looking for a way out. The system is all very broken. But the health plans, the insurance companies, are all more solvent than ever.
-Dr. Patrick Lyden, neurologitst UCSD,
Survey foresees exodus of physicians. San Diego Union Tribune. July 14, 2001.
If you really want to educate yourself on what you think is an "ideal" profession, go read an article about defensive medicine -
http://www.physweekly.com/article.asp?issueid=317&articleid=2982
or Drs being forced to let patients die rather than risking a lawsuit -
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,118049,00.html
or read why the best students are no longer going into medicine -
http://www.memag.com/memag/article/articleDetail.jsp?id=133883
Then if you still feel you want to pursue medicine, you can at least do it a little less blindly.