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I was told moonlighting wages can vary quite a bit. Just wanted to get a sense of what to expect from those of you out there who have moonlighted. Thanks!
castaway said:I was told moonlighting wages can vary quite a bit. Just wanted to get a sense of what to expect from those of you out there who have moonlighted. Thanks!
vtucci said:when you are moonlighting, how is malpractice insurance working? Do you need your own policy for this?
Seaglass said:Generally these days malpractice is covered by whoever is hiring you to moonlight. You need a state license and your own DEA to moonlight on the outside. Here in western NC it pays in the 90s-100s per hour for EM trained.
castaway said:I was told moonlighting wages can vary quite a bit. Just wanted to get a sense of what to expect from those of you out there who have moonlighted. Thanks!
macdaddy23 said:Probably a whole different topic:
It is true that as an independent contractor(IC) the company you work for generally provides the malpractice insurance and tail coverage; however, be careful as to who you work for.
Make sure they are a strong company financially and will be around for a while. A promise to pay tail insurance means nothing if the company files for bankruptcy.
There was a company in the south a few years back who paid residents well but they went bankrupt and the residents were sent letters that they were now responsible for tail coverage (much more money than any of them made).
Radiohead said:This is from a PGY I, starting in July.
There are 2 forms of moonlighting possible, in house and external. Not all institutions offer in house moonlighting, but mine, Carolinas, offers shifts in the fast track at $60/hour (10 hour shifts). You can do this as a first year, as long as you have completed 1 month of EM, and stay within the 80 hour work week. Other programs have things where you can teach ACLS, do code call, take admissions for other services,etc. All of these, as long as you are working under the auspices of your home institution, don't require you to get your own malpractice insurance. Nor do they require you to get a permanent medical license.
Now, on the other hand external moonlighting is quite different, because you are essentially going out on your own and working in an ED independent of your residency program. There is a big debate as to whether working independently in an ED while still being a resident compromises the validity of the specialty. I'll leave this alone. Anyway, there are certain requirements to being able to moonlight. 1) You need your permanent medical license. Thus, you must have completed 1 year of post graduate training and pass step 3. (This is different for FMG's and DO's in some states) 2) You will need seperate malpractice insurance. This is usually picked up by which ever institution you are working for. Getting your medical license is expensive, but well worth it when you are pulling in an extra 30,000 a year in some cases.
In addition, some programs use a cutoff for the inservice exam for moonlighting. It varies among programs. I hope this helps.
I don't qualify for economic hardship (from my base salary alone, not including moonlighting). I'm not repaying my loans yet.TysonCook said:You also need to be careful about your loan arrangements. Several residents I spoke with managed to make enough $$ that they no longer qualified for the economic hardship deferrment, which then bumped them back into repayment.
castaway said:One agency will fly you to Corpus Christi, TX and pay $100/hr. Beaches in Corpus are pretty decent.
Radiohead said:This is from a PGY I, starting in July.
There are 2 forms of moonlighting possible, in house and external. Not all institutions offer in house moonlighting, but mine, Carolinas, offers shifts in the fast track at $60/hour (10 hour shifts). You can do this as a first year, as long as you have completed 1 month of EM, and stay within the 80 hour work week.
jashanley said:This sounds a little frightening to me. A first year with one month of EM experience running a fast track? Do you have attending oversight?
castaway said:Jeff,
Try emergency consultants inc. at 800-253-1795.