to the 80-120K region, with hilary clintons impending plans, and even without that, universal health care seems like its coming.
to the 80-120K region, with hilary clintons impending plans, and even without that, universal health care seems like its coming.
Don't really care. As long as I have a place to stay and food to survive 🙂
to the 80-120K region, with hilary clintons impending plans, and even without that, universal health care seems like its coming.
that type of salary is enough to live more than comfortably. also, if you get married you can add your spouse's incometo the 80-120K region, with hilary clintons impending plans, and even without that, universal health care seems like its coming.
Respect is all that matters to me.
that type of salary is enough to live more than comfortably. also, if you get married you can add your spouse's income
lol no you're right on both fronts! 80k is livable.unless she doesn't work...
cue the "omg you are such a sexist" comments.
bite me.
I can live on 80,000... My parents TOGETHER don't make that much...
👍Yay for unfounded generalizations and vague analysis! 👍
Respect is all that matters to me.
Respect is all that matters to me.
Add malpractice insurance in as well.How is $80K "good enough" when you're paying back $150K+ in loans? And with loan deferment for residents now being in jeopardy? Seriously folks, put the idealism aside a little bit.
Though I have serious doubts about salaries coming down to this level in the first place...
Don't really care. As long as I have a place to stay and food to survive 🙂
Seen them in the ER during volunteer hours. They yell at me when I tell them they can't go home because the doctor hasn't come yet. Then they get all fired up and demand to leave. At that time I summon the nurse and she either convinces them to stay or gets the paperwork. Oh well, they'll be back in a few days anyway.Good luck with that. 😉
From many of your drug-dependent/-abusing Axis-II'ers, it's not likely.
Guess which one's you'll probably remember most. 😉
That's such a great attitude. Medicine needs more people like you
What exactly about her plan would lead to compensation in the 80-120k range? Or did you just completely make that up?to the 80-120K region, with hilary clintons impending plans, and even without that, universal health care seems like its coming.
They assume that because most of the uninsured can't afford average premiums, and further, they might draw more resources as they may be more unhealthy as a group. People are afraid that they might have to "subsidize" their health care. Personally, I'd rather live in a country where if you work and play by the rules, you get health care, even if that means I make 175,000 and not 185,000 (concern for the common good, wow imagine that).maybe I am missing something but how is it that people assume that because MORE people have insurance doctors will make less? doesn't MORE insurance mean MORE visits to the doctor per year?
maybe I am missing something but how is it that people assume that because MORE people have insurance doctors will make less? doesn't MORE insurance mean MORE visits to the doctor per year?
maybe I am missing something but how is it that people assume that because MORE people have insurance doctors will make less? doesn't MORE insurance mean MORE visits to the doctor per year?
What exactly about her plan would lead to compensation in the 80-120k range? Or did you just completely make that up?
They assume that because most of the uninsured can't afford average premiums, and further, they might draw more resources as they may be more unhealthy as a group. People are afraid that they might have to "subsidize" their health care. Personally, I'd rather live in a country where if you work and play by the rules, you get health care, even if that means I make 175,000 and not 185,000 (concern for the common good, wow imagine that).
Just as we "subsidize" public education for ALL students, we should do the same with health care. It really is our responsibility as a modern nation.
Canada's got it, but while incomes are slightly lower, they are NOT in the 80-120 range. 150-200 for most specialties is more like it, and then your malpractice is basically nothing.
I'd just hope we do a better job with healthcare than we do with public education.
I'd just hope we do a better job with healthcare than we do with public education.
maybe I am missing something but how is it that people assume that because MORE people have insurance doctors will make less? doesn't MORE insurance mean MORE visits to the doctor per year?
A significant # of doctors in Canada work less than 40 hours a week.http://www.payscale.com/research/ca/People_with_Jobs_as_Physicians_/_Doctors/Salary
Goes as low as 85K for ER docs... family docs make about 100K.
Just the equipment used for some of the procedures are pretty alarming.I doubt that there will be lower payouts, and I suspect volume will make up the difference. Under the current system, hospitals and private practices receive pennies on the dollar from the insurance companies (the biggest source of hospital income tends to be Medicare/Medicaid), so hospitals/practitioners inflate their costs in an effort to get back something approximating the actual cost of treatment. In a system in which everyone is covered, there is no reason for bill inflation to compensate for poor payouts, which will probably produce price stabilization around the actual cost of treatment + fees.
You realize this is a matter of opinion? Ask Oliver Wendell Holmes where his right to swing his fist ends.
Is healthcare a constitutional right?
So basically, your average American doc makes about 15% more than a Canadian, but for many, the slight decrease in income is worth the decrease in paperwork with a single reimbursement agency and a greater extent of freedom when it comes to choosing treatment options. Not to mention, Canadian medical school graduates pay about 30% of the American med school tuition, so we have fewer loans to pay back.
Word.hmmm, if i continue on my current job, in a year or two i'd be making 80k. so i sure hope the med school investment would yield a bit more than that? esp with debt and all...
Well, the 15% I gave as an approximation refers to the NET income, but as far as gross - yes, you are right.So while us in America make more, you guys keep more of you money because malpractice and med school loans aren't as high.
If you were a primary care doctor in an outpatient setting, and your overhead cost comes to around $40 per 15 minutes (rent, salary of office clerk, nurse/MA, billing/insurance clerk, utilities, and all insurance) ... who would you rather see in your 15 minute time slot
Patient A with Insurance A, which reimburse you $60 (and patient will pay $15 copay) for level-3 (CPT code 99213) office visit
Patient B with Insurance B, a medicaid HMO, which reimburse you $43 for a level-3 visit (patient with no copay)
Now you see 4 patients an hour, and you see patients for 7-8 hrs and you see a monetary difference between having 0% of your patients with Insurance B, versus having 60-70% of your patients with Insurance B
For you pre-meds out there who are shadowing physicians, ask which insurance pays well, and which insurance does not pay well (or if a doc does not accept some insurance, ask why)
lol no you're right on both fronts! 80k is livable.
good point, but on the flip side some doctors might prefer medicare or medicaid, because often times it can pay out more with less hassle. even in an outpatient setting, say you bump up that 99213 to a 99215 you're looking at a $150 rather than $50 with medicare. also it's easier to pull a fast one of the gov't versus private insurance companies. for example, doctors and companies that provide nursing care, electric wheel chairs, and medical supplies can easily work together to abuse medicare and medicaid. nursing companies provide doctors with a good supply of medicare clients as long as they make sure to once in a while prescribe nursing care and maybe an expensive wheel chair which is entirely covered my medicare. many doctors probably wouldnt even consider this immoral, since we are all trying to make a living right?
should medicine be a business or is it a basic human right? with the amount of time and money doctors spend to get to where they are, they are highly motivated to make it a business. spend 10+ years of your life racking up hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt to take the high road when it comes to making a judgment involving getting paid? doctors are good people, but no one is going to want to bust their butt and waste their youth for a poorly compensated profession, you better believe doctors will do what they have to in order to get paid, even if it means making a small moral compromise. and im sure there are many idealists out there who will disagree and say they will always do what is right, but i suggest that they wait until after med school and interning and then reconsider what they feel they deserve. medicine cannot be moral enterprise as long as the current medical education system is in place.
in addition with inpatient care medicare/medicaid is probably much preferred because you can be hospitalized for days to weeks with little restriction under one of the govt plans, but under an average private insurance company, there is no way you're staying there for days unless there is an extremely compelling reason.
I cannot imagine anything more frusterating than not being able to treat patinents and/or apply new treatments because their insurance company or HMO refuses to pay for it. What is the point of research if it can't be applied?