Currently weighing my options as a graduating resident considering interventional pain vs inpatient rehab. Opposite ends of the spectrum, I know.
Lifestyle is very important to me and I know inpatient rehab offers a lot of flexibility which I value. I like procedures but the thought of having a scheduled patients everyday seems exhausting to me. From what I’ve read it seems that pay is probably pretty similar unless you’re a partner of an interventional clinic in which case it’s higher.
Wonder if anyone could weigh in on why you went inpatient or more towards outpatient / procedures.
Don't go into pain just for the money.
If you actually love both fluoro and that patient population, do it. Otherwise? Not worth it.
I won't tell you money isn't important. That's just something people tell themselves to make themselves feel better about not having as much as they'd like. But you can make really good money in whatever line of work you end up. I work as inpatient rehab medical director. For the past 2 years, I've been making around $450K gross. Is that all the money in the world? No. Could I make more? Sure. Would it be worth it if I earned more but in exchange I had to do something I hated every day? Not a chance.
Numbers will be a bit down this year, given low census issues, etc, but I have a realistic path to North of $500K in 2023.
Basically, you have to see more patients if you want to make more. That sounds daunting at first but you get more efficient over time. I can round on twice the number I did when I first graduating without batting an eye. I can add SNF rounding if I want more money. I can add IMEs. There are a ton of ways to get extra income. The most important is to find something that doesn't make you want to shoot yourself when you're not counting your money.
Personally, I wouldn't do interventional pain for $2 mil/year. If that was all PM&R was, I'd never have chosen it. But you might feel differently. I never liked procedures, and I knew that on day 1 of med school. Some people would rather leave medicine altogether than do the inpatient work I do every day. Know yourself. Just remember that it's a lot easier to add extra work to your plate where you are than it is to move to a new location and start from scratch in a different line of work.
At the end of the day, assuming you're investing wisely, it wouldn't be hard to put $60K+ into retirement account every year, as long as you don't go into academia or peds or something. If you do that, even assuming only a 7.5% return, you'll have about 1.5 mil after 15 years.
Determine how much your money can grow using the power of compound interest.
www.investor.gov
Once you get to the point where your money is working for you, you're not going to be very motivated to work long hours or doing a whole of of things you don't care for just to earn more money. It just won't make sense. I'm not there yet, and this year my investments got bitchslapped by the stock market hard. I can still see that I'll be in a really good position by the time I'm 10 years out of training, though. Knowing now how relatively easy it is to ramp up your income, I'd have stressed out a whole lot less about average compensation etc. when I was in training.