Good Mountain said:
I really dont understand why in that salary survery an IM makes the same amount of money than what an ID doc makes, considering that IDs is a subspeciallity and takes 2-3 years more.
I can comment more on WHAT ID docs actually do.
ID was one of the subspecialties I've rotated through which has the most diverse group of patients you see. You get consults from ALL OVER the place including internal medicine, general surgery, neurosurgery, obstetrics etc. etc. It's great 'cause a lot of the problems are very interesting with rare infections coming in to play (i.e. weird fungal or parasitic infections etc.)
The thing with ID is that it's not always glorious. A large part of the inpatient consult service is acting as a "family doctor" for surgical service patients who have fevers, and the residents don't feel like searching for the infection. Of course, this is highly offset with all the other cool stuff you see.
Someone asked if there is a direct entrance to ID without doing internal medicine first. This, I hope, NEVER happens (nor will it really). Infectious Disease has a very strong and extensive base in Internal Medicine, and all ID docs have to be good internists on top of being good "infectionists".
In Canada, it is one of the lowest paid subspecialists in Internal Medicine, but it is also one of the most interesting and diverse.