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deleted1111261
Oh come on. This is SDN just picking on little ****. It’s a fun tweet. I think it’s great to support where you live. Jeez.
One of my Med school classmates did Radonc residency there. If I remember correctly, he had family from there.UCSD faculty positions had weird reputations since at least the mid-2000s. I wonder why exactly
Alaska _____ make BANKAlaska rad oncs make BANK
Alaska doesn’t sound so bad. Beautiful summers. Beautiful scenery. Lots of oil money. High cost of living in some areas, not not bad in others. Most nice houses in Anchorage are less then 500k.Alaska _____ make BANK
Milk costs $8 a gallon. Better be banking it
edit: even more in podunk AK
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Extreme grocery prices in rural Alaska shock TikTok: '$18 for milk'
TikTok user @emilyinalaska_ posted a video last week showcasing “Grocery prices in rural Alaska.” The video has been viewed 2.4 million times.www.foxbusiness.com
Telesupervision 4 lyfe. You couldn't pay me enough to get through an Alaskan winter in FairbanksWe are tied to a linac, remember !! Patient safety and all.
Which brings us back to... Drumroll please....This sounds like a job for the poor mans Scarb.
Approximately 1,000,000 get radiation for cancer in America.
Assuming in the near future there will be an average of 15-20 tx day span. Let's assume 15
There are 250 treatment days per year.
To have an average of 12 people on treatment per year how many RadOncs would be needed?
15 million (Patients*treatment days)
Divided by 250 possible days of treatment and 12 patients per RadOnc
Comes to 5000 RadOncs at any given time could carry this load.
5000 RadOncs divided by the average length of career (35 years?) = around 140 RadOncs in an out every year for equilibrium
I will ask physics to check my math
Wow that is almost how many US applicants there are.
Economists coming up with supply and demand and market correction theories be like:
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This sounds like a job for the poor mans Scarb.
Approximately 1,000,000 get radiation for cancer in America.
Assuming in the near future there will be an average of 15-20 tx day span. Let's assume 15
There are 250 treatment days per year.
To have an average of 12 people on treatment per year how many RadOncs would be needed?
We are tied to a linac, remember !! Patient safety and all.
Which brings us back to... Drumroll please....
The nadir of slots we had around 2007-2008 during peak rad Onc..... When AOA folks like myself were interviewing at ****holes and the Nature pub MD PhDs with 260+ on step 1 got to sniff the air at Sloane, Dana and Anderson
Hinges on 12 pts under beam per RO on avg if I'm reading your math right, and 5000 ROs would be the right amount for that. Welllll.... there were 5338 rad oncs in 2017. Adding 200 ROs per yr, with about 70/yr retiring, we should hit 6000 ROs this year or next. Which with ~6/5ths as many ROs (vs 5000), we can expect to have 5/6ths as many pts on beam, so we are heading to ~10 pts on beam per RO on average.This sounds like a job for the poor mans Scarb.
Approximately 1,000,000 get radiation for cancer in America.
Assuming in the near future there will be an average of 15-20 tx day span. Let's assume 15
There are 250 treatment days per year.
To have an average of 12 people on treatment per year how many RadOncs would be needed?
15 million (Patients*treatment days)
Divided by 250 possible days of treatment and 12 patients per RadOnc
Comes to 5000 RadOncs at any given time could carry this load.
5000 RadOncs divided by the average length of career (35 years?) = around 140 RadOncs in an out every year for equilibrium
I will ask physics to check my math
Wow that is almost how many US applicants there are.
Economists coming up with supply and demand and market correction theories be like:
![]()
I'm not a big fan of all the detailed prognosticating of job numbers. The problem is just not well defined in terms of human behavior. The fact is, radonc graduates have less ability to determine location than almost any of their peers and this has been the case for awhile.
For the clinically minded doc, I'm not sure the job is that intellectually stimulating. (This does not apply to those running a lab, who happen to be those who are viewed as "serious" by the academic establishment). I personally value my work and the lifestyle it has afforded me. I feel like I'm on the outside looking in as oncology evolves annually around me., and I am not that motivated to pursue further advances in conformality. The patients are great but my deepest conversations with them often involve prognosis, effectiveness and toxicity of systemic therapy, which I am not giving. I rarely make a diagnosis. I spend more time learning about medical oncology than radiation oncology at this point.
As a GenXer, who is roughly 8 years older than my professional peers, I have noticed some trends that make job prognostication difficult.
Millennials had to work much harder, in a much more competitive academic environment, than their predecessors to get to medical school and excel there. This, combined with their observations of their job-obsessed, boomer parents, makes them much more likely to walk away from money and emphasize time and life-style over cash as they approach middle age. (It doesn't hurt that many of them have parents who are sitting on substantial portfolios).
The boomers, like all of us, will die.
My exact takeFor the clinically minded doc, I'm not sure the job is that intellectually stimulating. (This does not apply to those running a lab, who happen to be those who are viewed as "serious" by the academic establishment). I personally value my work and the lifestyle it has afforded me. I feel like I'm on the outside looking in as oncology evolves annually around me., and I am not that motivated to pursue further advances in conformality. The patients are great but my deepest conversations with them often involve prognosis, effectiveness and toxicity of systemic therapy, which I am not giving. I rarely make a diagnosis. I spend more time learning about medical oncology than radiation oncology at this point.
You rarely see surgeons operating into their 70s but it is not uncommon to have old guys sitting at the top making tons of money in our field, taking advantage of younger colleagues. We have some ridiculously greedy people in practice.I’d also expect a 35 year career average is an overestimate. That would have people retiring between 65-75 depending on when you completed residency. Most folks will retire between 60-65, not even taking into account people who FIRE, go part time, retire for medical reasons, or pass away.
Yeah.... now that I've finally paid off my debts; I am treading very cautiously about jumping into stocks at this time. I know damn well those dinguses are going to yank it the moment they see a crash coming. That's a lot of boomer money exiting the market at one time and I'm not getting left holding that bag.Boomers will die…if history is any guide It won’t be pretty. They will soon be buried with their money than give it to anyone.
They have most of the money property stocks than any subsequent generation. They enjoyed stock returns and career advancement the likes of which you will never see. I could see them pissing it away in the end. A nice little **** you to close out an entire lifetime of good breaks.
Yeah.... now that I've finally paid off my debts; I am treading very cautiously about jumping into stocks at this time. I know damn well those dinguses are going to yank it the moment they see a crash coming. That's a lot of boomer money exiting the market at one time and I'm not getting left holding that bag.
Inactually welcome a crash so i can buy the dip and HODL.Yeah.... now that I've finally paid off my debts; I am treading very cautiously about jumping into stocks at this time. I know damn well those dinguses are going to yank it the moment they see a crash coming. That's a lot of boomer money exiting the market at one time and I'm not getting left holding that bag.
I'm not a big fan of all the detailed prognosticating of job numbers. The problem is just not well defined in terms of human behavior. The fact is, radonc graduates have less ability to determine location than almost any of their peers and this has been the case for awhile.
For the clinically minded doc, I'm not sure the job is that intellectually stimulating. (This does not apply to those running a lab, who happen to be those who are viewed as "serious" by the academic establishment). I personally value my work and the lifestyle it has afforded me. I feel like I'm on the outside looking in as oncology evolves annually around me., and I am not that motivated to pursue further advances in conformality. The patients are great but my deepest conversations with them often involve prognosis, effectiveness and toxicity of systemic therapy, which I am not giving. I rarely make a diagnosis. I spend more time learning about medical oncology than radiation oncology at this point.
As a GenXer, who is roughly 8 years older than my professional peers, I have noticed some trends that make job prognostication difficult.
Millennials had to work much harder, in a much more competitive academic environment, than their predecessors to get to medical school and excel there. This, combined with their observations of their job-obsessed, boomer parents, makes them much more likely to walk away from money and emphasize time and life-style over cash as they approach middle age. (It doesn't hurt that many of them have parents who are sitting on substantial portfolios).
The boomers, like all of us, will die.
Basically the whole reason we have an oral exam.
Make sure people have a GENERAL good idea of how to treat and not just memorizing words from a book for a few months before a test
Basically the whole reason we have an oral exam
Agreed. Some of this year's class will be the among the weakest medstudents in the country. Good idea to have some testing.This is why I like oral boards
I don’t think we should get rid of them, which seems to be a fairly controversial opinion online
Agreed. Some of this year's class will be the among the weakest medstudents in the country. Good idea to have some testing.
Also the mosquitoes are the size of your head. Hard no.Telesupervision 4 lyfe. You couldn't pay me enough to get through an Alaskan winter in Fairbanks
Chelaine G and others hard at work on this in breast cancer. mdacc should think about changing their logo to crossing out radiation in cancer.Is there a cow in Texas?
Because ofcourse they are. Im getting the feeling the reason alot of these MD PhDs liked RO so much is because it really isn't so demanding and they can focus on research. The gatekeepers though "oh if we have al these MD PhDs they'll help us innovate" news flash they didn't, They are too busy conspiring to end RO for good so they can finally get that 100% research job they always wanted.Chelaine G and others hard at work on this in breast cancer. mdacc should think about changing their logo to crossing out radiation in cancer.
They are too busy conspiring to end RO for good so they can finally get that 100% research job they always wanted.
Getting a radiation course done quicker or not at all does help you get more time back in the lab and make it more likely for out of towners to get treatment at the big academic mothership.dude
Haha! No. But, taking a single intervention, with indications based on large clinical trials with diverse patient characteristics (evidence based medicine), and dismantling these indications through the process of personalized, molecular medicine, is much easier than creating new therapeutics that will somehow find their way under the purview of radiation oncology.They are too busy conspiring to end RO for good so they can finally get that 100% research job they always wanted.
I agree.Getting a radiation course done quicker or not at all does help you get more time back in the lab and make it more likely for out of towners to get treatment at the big academic mothership.
Any other academic Satellite talking points you wish to share with us?‘the process of personalized, molecular medicine, is much easier’
Yeah so easy. Come on folks this is nuts.
I much prefer the more logical point of view - this type of work is great for patients, great for society, is an unstoppable immutable force in that if one person isn’t doing it, someone else will, as it’s common sense, when you have a robust circulating marker like HPV DNA. Great for society but needs to come along with a reduction in workforce
I imagine you were also angry when early salvage versus post op RT trials were planned for prostate cancer
Dude every other time it’s a different retort. Pick a lane.Any other academic Satellite talking points you wish to share with us?
A large reduction in adjuvant breast radiation sometime in the next 20 years would kill a lot of careeers. A medstudent who doesn’t consider this is an idiot.Dude every other time it’s a different retort. Pick a lane.
A large reduction in adjuvant breast radiation sometime in the next 20 years would kill a lot of careeers. A medstudent who doesn’t consider this is an idiot.
A large reduction in adjuvant breast radiation sometime in the next 20 years would kill a lot of careeers. A medstudent who doesn’t consider this is an idiot.
I think you're misinterpreting the sentiment.‘the process of personalized, molecular medicine, is much easier’
Yeah so easy. Come on folks this is nuts.
I much prefer the more logical point of view - this type of work is great for patients, great for society, is an unstoppable immutable force in that if one person isn’t doing it, someone else will, as it’s common sense, when you have a robust circulating marker like HPV DNA. Great for society but needs to come along with a reduction in workforce
I imagine you were also angry when early salvage versus post op RT trials were planned for prostate cancer
It is great, but it should also be accompanied by a clear reduction in radonc workforce.
Never mind then. I agree with you too. Just seemed like you didn't 😆yes, this is what I said. not what you said. but now that you said it, I agree with you.
I think you're misinterpreting the sentiment.
It is great, but it should also be accompanied by a clear reduction in radonc workforce. It is also easier (but not easy) than creating new therapeutics. Prove me wrong. A new drug is overwhelmingly likely to be a failure. A study refining indications for an existing therapy is much more likely to impact clinical practice than a study of a new therapy.
The only thing I'm blaming on academic radonc is their willful refusal to acknowledge the shrinking clinical footprint of their specialty and continued overtraining.
Well that's not all. Recently had a prestigious academic place with a shared patient tell me that if "they" felt palliative stereotactic treatment was appropriate, they would prefer to administer themselves, but if they felt "standard palliative" radiation was appropriate, that they wanted me to do it. WTF? Meanwhile, in typical fashion, not clear to me that docs at this place had had the hard conversations about prognosis and why they would consider one treatment vs the other with this patient. So there is a cultural element of interaction with academic radonc that can be painful.
‘the process of personalized, molecular medicine, is much easier’
Yeah so easy. Come on folks this is nuts.
I much prefer the more logical point of view - this type of work is great for patients, great for society, is an unstoppable immutable force in that if one person isn’t doing it, someone else will, as it’s common sense, when you have a robust circulating marker like HPV DNA. Great for society but needs to come along with a reduction in workforce
I imagine you were also angry when early salvage versus post op RT trials were planned for prostate cancer
yes, this is what I said. not what you said. but now that you said it, I agree with you.
I am a community doc, but despite what people in academics may think at times, this does NOT mean I am greedy, dumb, or not keeping up with the way the field is going.
I have no desire to impact a head and neck cancer patient's quality of life more than I have to. I can NOT wait until I can give 60 Gy or lower rather than 70 Gy for HPV OPSCC, for example. I can't wait!
It is strange to me if any of you are annoyed by this. especially when one less OTV may not even matter in a future billing mechanism.
You still can do that. MSKCC doing 30 Gy to nodes off trial for HPV+
Stop trying to act all high and mighty
No bc they all still got RT