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I think the data shows it’s about 80/20.
which data are you using for this?
I think the data shows it’s about 80/20.
For every inova or SERO, what about those practices that got swallowed up over the years by 21C/Genesis care, oncure (which was swallowed up by 21C), vantage etc. Some of those practices were shut down. In other cases, certain hospital based PP groups essentially were forced out or retired by larger organizations taking over multiple hospitals throughout the years (mskcc, upmc and CCF have definitely done this afaik)Definite fair critique. Above groups incredibly elite. I would guess as much emphasis on pedigree as almost any academic place.
Cease and desist!It is not true for her, and she is getting dangerously close to making libelous statements about a practice against which she competes in a regulated marketplace.
Well you know I read everything. I use all the data available. Like here, and here, and here.which data are you using for this?
My first glance is that this abstract is not telling us anything about *net* job adds over the 2016-2020 time period. It does show that for a ~4 year period in the US, ~40% of (666, yikes) offered jobs were academic and the other 60% PP. But again this is telling me nothing about net job adds over time. To determine net job adds over time, we need to determine/agree upon just three things:not sure where in those links you point out the 80/20, was wondering if there was some good data.
the best I can find is this: 40% academic/60% non-academic over 4 years of analysis.
let me know if you find something better
When I was looking, the group north of Boston was taking over local hospital contracts and kicking out the docs and replacing them with new grads. Fired a bunch of docs from Lahey, including that year’s astro Gold medal winner. Several members of group like “subatomic doc” are active on twitter.For every inova or SERO, what about those practices that got swallowed up over the years by 21C/Genesis care, oncure (which was swallowed up by 21C), vantage etc. Some of those practices were shut down. In other cases, certain hospital based PP groups essentially were forced out or retired by larger organizations taking over multiple hospitals throughout the years (mskcc, upmc and CCF have definitely done this afaik)
NOT NEW JOBS. Just jobs. There’s a big difference. A job seeker seeks any job. A growing workforce needs new jobs.i agree that it is a different question, but the 80/20 has to be based on something.
if all new jobs being offered over 4 years are 40 percent academic/60 percent PP, that is probably the more relevant thing for anyone looking for jobs, though your question is a good one. if you come up with a way to come up with a decent guess, im all ears.
A result of resident oversupply which begets new (low salary) RO oversupply which tends to attrition out older (higher salary) ROs.When I was looking, the group north of Boston was taking over local hospital practices and kicking out the docs and replacing them with new grads. Fired a bunch of docs from Lahey, including that years Gold medal winner.
Eventually everyone gets screwed by an oversupply unless you own your own equipmentA result of resident oversupply which begets new (low salary) RO oversupply which tends to attrition out older (higher salary) ROs.
Truest statement that will be made here todayEventually everyone gets screwed by an oversupply unless you own your own equipment
Not everyone. Employers love oversupplyEventually everyone gets screwed by an oversupply unless you own your own equipment
Not everyone. Employers love oversupply
Most academic departments don't own the equipment and the Chairs love oversupply (see Hallahan IJROBP)Don't the employers usually own the equipment?
NOT NEW JOBS. Just jobs. There’s a big difference. A job seeker seeks any job. A growing workforce needs new jobs.
EDIT: The 80/20 is based on the fact that anything for PP greater than 50% makes no sense with the academic attending boom that has happened last 20y. 66/33 is feasible (40 new PP jobs a year), 75/25 is feasible (30 new PP jobs a year), etc.
Let's not forget one of their group is first-author on a 2021 paper spinning job market concerns as just the fanciful imagination of anonymous, online misanthropes.When I was looking, the group north of Boston was taking over local hospital contracts and kicking out the docs and replacing them with new grads. Fired a bunch of docs from Lahey, including that year’s astro Gold medal winner. Several members of group like “subatomic doc” are active on twitter.
New jobs is relevant because if a job is created by firing someone, now you have 2 people looking for a job/more competition.I understand that. Im saying your question is a different one in terms of NEW jobs.
the relevant thing to someone looking for jobs is just jobs, not new jobs, but again, your question is an interesting one
but if its just based on a total guess, I guess the range of possiblity is pretty wide.
New jobs is relevant because if a job is created by firing someone, now you have 2 people looking for a job/more competition.
why did you guys stopI don't know about SERO specifically, but I know for a fact that a few physician-owned RO mega-groups in the country have stopped offering technical partnership for years. The best new grads can get is straight salary with RVU bonuses/incentives.
We have not stopped, but I know others who have. I would assume principles are the same for any other large professional corporation. Namely there are "senior" partners who founded the practice who took significant risk and now want to continue to reap the rewards. "Junior" partners are welcomed and nurtured but will always be viewed as employees.why did you guys stop
The best practices do not do this.We have not stopped, but I know others who have. I would assume principles are the same for any other large professional corporation. Namely there are "senior" partners who founded the practice who took significant risk and now want to continue to reap the rewards. "Junior" partners are welcomed and nurtured but will always be viewed as employees.
Happened in our neck of the woods, too. And in AZ.We have not stopped, but I know others who have. I would assume principles are the same for any other large professional corporation. Namely there are "senior" partners who founded the practice who took significant risk and now want to continue to reap the rewards. "Junior" partners are welcomed and nurtured but will always be viewed as employees.
On an individual person or individual year basis I agree. But over time, the rate of production (ie residents per year) of radiation oncologists is increasing; this is highly knowable. And over time, we know the number of practicing ROs in America per year, and this is increasing; this (the number of ROs) is generally knowable. There has been a clear trend in shift from PP to academics (data, and seen-with-own-eyes). If we were at the Bureau of Labor Statistics we would be talking "job creation" vs unemployment (and which sectors are supporting job creation: academic or PP?). If the growth in PP has been anemic and RO job growth has been largely supported by academics—and we see a slowing of academic jobs—we have yet another data point supporting the need to slow RO production (ie decrease resident supply). I am, too, definitely suspicious PP job growth has been anemic vs academic job growth.Yeah - I am not sure why new job matters, rather than jobs available, overall.
To echo Dunn, if you're looking for a job, and there are 200 available (hahahahahahahhhahahahaahah!), does it make a difference if 100 are new, 200 are new or 0 are new?
Is that the issue? That it's a brown woman speaking her mind? Interesting transition.Nothing more triggering to men’s egos than a brown woman speaking her mind. Live your truth sister!
Is that the issue? That it's a brown woman speaking her mind? Interesting transition.
How about someone focusing on a local issue in a specialty that isn't hers and endorsing a global solution having more trainees to solve the problem of access in her Texas town?
No one else brought up gender / race ... wonder why you perceive it as that?
I see it as someone who has little data / understanding about something complex, but wants to sound like she's doing something "for the patients". Anyone of any gender / race doing that deserves some push back, right? Even as gentle as mine ...
Surgeons are very "what have you done for me lately" and the flipside of that is "how have you pissed me off lately." Like Dr. Phil says, it takes a thousand "Atta boy!"'s to make up for one "you're stupid." You piss a surgeon off once, woe unto you. They're elephants, they never forget. And if you delayed care once, then you get the label of A Care Delay-er. 60% of American centers start RT on 2 or less breast cancer patients a week (hard data; and therefore >60% of individual ROs start RT on 2 or less breast cancer pts per week), and 99% of American RT centers have breast cancer as their main service line. Access to care along the lines of a general surgeon not getting timely RO consults shouldn't be a problem in general for American radiation oncology. That said, outliers happen; and it sounds like 2 ROs for 40 med oncs (if that ratio is real) is a significant outlier. And sometimes fake problems seem very real from the outside.Is that the issue? That it's a brown woman speaking her mind? Interesting transition.
How about someone focusing on a local issue in a specialty that isn't hers and endorsing a global solution having more trainees to solve the problem of access in her Texas town?
No one else brought up gender / race ... wonder why you perceive it as that?
I see it as someone who has little data / understanding about something complex, but wants to sound like she's doing something "for the patients". Anyone of any gender / race doing that deserves some push back, right? Even as gentle as mine ...
The number of ROs who owned their own chopper or plane was pretty high late 80's into the 90's. 21st Century definitely bought a lot of private jet flights, saw that first-hand several times.I did hear that Bill Taylor bought his plane to improve patient access!
Damn I’m really falling behind in my neck of the woods. Got to buy a plane
all of medicine has the issue of the same people who sit at the top gobbling all opportunities for others. In our small field, this dynamic is highly amplified. Same crew gobbles up all NRG, ASTRO, ACRO,ACR, ABR, ABS, ARRO opportunities. They also sit at the top in cities and refuse to bring anybody in because it would hurt their bottom line. The best thing that could happen to this field is to have most people over 55 start winding down to retirement. How many more lines do you need on your resume? How many more senior authorships must you gobble up at NRG preventing others from benefitting? How much money do you need?
Greed!
Nah, I like that guy. He's cool. We used to play cards on Thursday nights. He has quite a poker face.so per you, this guy, and many others in the practice, should be sent out to pasture?
out to pasture? More like freedom. I'm doing it ASAFP.so per you, this guy, and many others in the practice, should be sent out to pasture?
I think it depends on how he practices. If he treats as if it is 1989, take him out back. If he stays up to date and treats with appropriate levels of competence, then he can practice until he is deemed incompetent.so per you, this guy, and many others in the practice, should be sent out to pasture?
I got hosed!back when the wallnernus first started practicing and others here who got to work in the glory days of the early 2000s, it took 5 minutes to plan, 1 minute to say hi at the otv, and 23 hours to count cash!
man you have it made.
I treated prostate mostly. We hosted all the on-treats at Ruth's Chris for appetizers and wine and a talk every Wednesday night. Drinks, snacks, shake everyone's hand, 77427s in one fell swoop. And it was all tax deductible. The dessert was "Enticement Lava Cake."back when the wallnernus first started practicing and others here who got to work in the glory days of the early 2000s, it took 5 minutes to plan, 1 minute to say hi at the otv, and 23 hours to count cash!
man you have it made.
Apparently the real glory days were the early 80s when CT planning first started and Medicare hadn't squeezed anything quite yet. Before my time, but knew a guy who practiced then -- rad onc was his hobby when I met him -- hobby because he was raking it in as owner of a bank.back when the wallnernus first started practicing and others here who got to work in the glory days of the early 2000s, it took 5 minutes to plan, 1 minute to say hi at the otv, and 23 hours to count cash!
man you have it made.