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http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview/id/273686.html
Here's an interesting thread I found on a Google search.
What you find for "average" physician salary is going to vary by what source(s) you consult. I think that it may not be that useful to try to compare "physician salary" to "average person". There is a big range in physician salaries, with some specialties easily averaging double the salary of others like psych and peds.
I think a lot of what you see/observe about physicians complaining about reimbursements is that the gov't yearly threatens to cut the Medicare payment rate, which would in effect lower ALL insurance reimbursements, since the private insurers base their payment rates on Medicare's reimbursement rates. At the 11th hour, Congress always bails out Medicare so that it doesn't get cut, or gets a 0.5% or 1% physician payment raise to try to account for some of practice cost inflation, etc. If Medicare did carry out its proposed 40% total reimbursement cut, that could be cataclysmic for a lot of medical practices which are currently profitable....so the fear is there even though the actual event hasn't really taken place.
I think most physicians are still paid well. However, compared with years past, they/we go through more years of training, and the cost of medical education has inflated >> the rate of inflation of money/most other things. I see a lot more students doing other degrees, etc. just to get themselves into med school...some have incredible amounts of debt. Personally, I had a research job before med school, and have done research years where I'm paid a resident level salary (though already boarded in internal medicine). That was my choice to do that but mostly I did it to help get myself into fellowship.
I think what you are seeing is jut a lot of fear from trainees and practicing physicians that after devoting 10 years or so to medical education (plus 4 years in undergrad) that we'll not necessarily get to the point of not having to worry about money any time soon. It's not necessarily a matter of avarice, as you seem to feel, Excelcius, it's more one of general insecurity and fear about the future. Personally, I know I'll be all right with my 120k remaining student loans 5 years out from med school, but I do worry about the med students who'll have the 250k debt at 6.8%, or whatever it is now. I think they can dig themselves out of debt eventually, but it's going to take quite some time.
Here's an interesting thread I found on a Google search.
What you find for "average" physician salary is going to vary by what source(s) you consult. I think that it may not be that useful to try to compare "physician salary" to "average person". There is a big range in physician salaries, with some specialties easily averaging double the salary of others like psych and peds.
I think a lot of what you see/observe about physicians complaining about reimbursements is that the gov't yearly threatens to cut the Medicare payment rate, which would in effect lower ALL insurance reimbursements, since the private insurers base their payment rates on Medicare's reimbursement rates. At the 11th hour, Congress always bails out Medicare so that it doesn't get cut, or gets a 0.5% or 1% physician payment raise to try to account for some of practice cost inflation, etc. If Medicare did carry out its proposed 40% total reimbursement cut, that could be cataclysmic for a lot of medical practices which are currently profitable....so the fear is there even though the actual event hasn't really taken place.
I think most physicians are still paid well. However, compared with years past, they/we go through more years of training, and the cost of medical education has inflated >> the rate of inflation of money/most other things. I see a lot more students doing other degrees, etc. just to get themselves into med school...some have incredible amounts of debt. Personally, I had a research job before med school, and have done research years where I'm paid a resident level salary (though already boarded in internal medicine). That was my choice to do that but mostly I did it to help get myself into fellowship.
I think what you are seeing is jut a lot of fear from trainees and practicing physicians that after devoting 10 years or so to medical education (plus 4 years in undergrad) that we'll not necessarily get to the point of not having to worry about money any time soon. It's not necessarily a matter of avarice, as you seem to feel, Excelcius, it's more one of general insecurity and fear about the future. Personally, I know I'll be all right with my 120k remaining student loans 5 years out from med school, but I do worry about the med students who'll have the 250k debt at 6.8%, or whatever it is now. I think they can dig themselves out of debt eventually, but it's going to take quite some time.