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- Pre-Psychology
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Money is not the reason any of us are here. Hopefully we all enjoy what we do/plan to do. But based on posts and other threads and just knowledge in general, I still have a nagging question:
I am well aware that the median salary for PhD-level psychologists hovers around the high $70ks. And I understand that for those working in research or lower on the academia totem pole, wages may not be that remarkable.
But it appears that even the top 10% of earners- presumably those with more years of experience in the clinical world or those who are higher in an academic setting- just barely break the six-figures mark.
I'm just rather confused by these numbers. Even in gross simplicity, let's say someone working in private practice sees just 15 patients a week, at $100/hr (I really don't know what the going rate is- and it will surely be less in places that aren't the NYC-metro area or other major city regions-, but I understand that Medicaid reimbursement in upstate NY is nearly this) and works 48 weeks a year. That is still $72000, just around the median. And that's only 15 hours a week! Who works that!? Bump it to $150/hr, just 25 patients a week and the same 48 weeks, and it's $180,000.
Now, please, before you all get in a huff about this generalization/disregard of important factors such as reimbursement issues and whatever other short comings this question has that forum posters can drum up, take it at face value.
I'm really just wondering why this median, and especially the top 10% figures, seem rather low (not that they are necessarily inaccurate). But why is this so?
I am well aware that the median salary for PhD-level psychologists hovers around the high $70ks. And I understand that for those working in research or lower on the academia totem pole, wages may not be that remarkable.
But it appears that even the top 10% of earners- presumably those with more years of experience in the clinical world or those who are higher in an academic setting- just barely break the six-figures mark.
I'm just rather confused by these numbers. Even in gross simplicity, let's say someone working in private practice sees just 15 patients a week, at $100/hr (I really don't know what the going rate is- and it will surely be less in places that aren't the NYC-metro area or other major city regions-, but I understand that Medicaid reimbursement in upstate NY is nearly this) and works 48 weeks a year. That is still $72000, just around the median. And that's only 15 hours a week! Who works that!? Bump it to $150/hr, just 25 patients a week and the same 48 weeks, and it's $180,000.
Now, please, before you all get in a huff about this generalization/disregard of important factors such as reimbursement issues and whatever other short comings this question has that forum posters can drum up, take it at face value.
I'm really just wondering why this median, and especially the top 10% figures, seem rather low (not that they are necessarily inaccurate). But why is this so?
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