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To all the attendings, or even residents, out there- Do you ever regret choosing to go into PM&R? Why or why not?
To all the attendings, or even residents, out there- Do you ever regret choosing to go into PM&R? Why or why not?
I would think most people who regret going into PM&R would also regret going into medicine as a whole.
You can do lots of IM and primary care inpatient. Lots of opportunities for psych. Fellowships are available for procedures if not comfortable out of training. Sports, spine do minor surgeries, with future possibly looking more like same-day surgical. Plenty of research and academic opportunities. If that doesn’t float your boat there are also opportunities in administration and also with insurance companies. Can get into neurology-type practice, PEDs, disability, workers comp, brain or spine injury, SNFs, etc. There definitely are some boring parts in PM&R for all of us, but we each find our niche and stick with it for the most part.
I’ve worked a lot of jobs in my time. PM&R is by far the best and hopefully final career for me. Sometimes I do still consider a spine/pain fellowship one day, but really hard to give up 1 years pay to go back into training. There is also a lot about spine that gives me hesitation. Occasionally, I think about Orthopedics, but I am overall glad I didn’t go into that. Ultimately I’d rather not work, but got bills to pay and PM&R gives me the opportunity for lifestyle and reasonable pay.
Now if I had a job where I had to do EMGs all day I’d quit and run as fast as I could.
Oh man I love EMGs (assuming it’s legit academic EMG)…but to each their ownIf I had to do EMGs all day, I would join you in quitting and run faster than you! Lol. Sorry I couldn't help myself! 🙂
Oh man I love EMGs (assuming it’s legit academic EMG)…but to each their own
If you had that job and quit... let me know so I can sign up! 🙂 I love EMGIf I had to do EMGs all day, I would join you in quitting and run faster than you! Lol. Sorry I couldn't help myself! 🙂
If you had that job and quit... let me know so I can sign up! 🙂 I love EMG
What didn’t you like about rads?I don’t. After going into Rads initially and hating it, I am glad I chose PM&R. In the past few years it has also grown, expanded etc a great deal. There are so many things you can do within the field that you can find your niche. It’s also a type of field where you can work full time, you can do part time if you find yourself in the need to cut back some, have side options etc. lots of options to chose from. Our specialty is not glamorous for sure but as our population gets older the opportunities are significant.
Happy to hear, current PGY2 PM&R applying Pain next year. Can you talk more about your salary structure? Private or Academic? 5 days a week?I was nervous about this. I am very happy that I chose it. I’m doing Pain now and happy with my lifestyle, salary and my ability to use both specialities at work.
Under academic umbrella, but community hospital. Salary is overwhelmingly a healthy base with a small incentive. 4.5 / week, .5 research.Happy to hear, current PGY2 PM&R applying Pain next year. Can you talk more about your salary structure? Private or Academic? 5 days a week?
Do you think there are areas of PM&R that are experiencing more burnout than others? Inpatient vs. outpatient? Certain subspecialties?"find a fix" is not that easy. Many are stuck in contracts, have to be in a certain area or have limited knowledge of the breath of our specialty. Significant number are waiting for things to improve or are on an academic track. As part of my job I have literally talked to 2000+ Physiatrist the last 10 years. The burnout in our specialty is real and is getting worse IMO.
Glad I rotated in an elite sports med practice as a resident and saw this first hand. No way the “prestige” and free team gear make up for that beat down.I should add I have been seeing a lot of PM&R sports docs getting burnt out. Not fun to do unpaid week night and weekend coverage for sports, see 40 patient a day with only a handful are athletes and the rest are OA, get paid less than 250k in bigger towns and no chance of becoming a voting partner. Most sports fellows don't know the reality of non academic private practice sports med.
I saw this first hand too where the pmr doctor would do a ton of coverage almost every weekend for the Orthopods. That’s not a life that sucks big time. I don’t see how or why medicine is one of the few fields where free labor is ok after years and years of trainingGlad I rotated in an elite sports med practice as a resident and saw this first hand. No way the “prestige” and free team gear make up for that beat down.
I think we went to the same residency?I saw this first hand too where the pmr doctor would do a ton of coverage almost every weekend for the Orthopods. That’s not a life that sucks big time. I don’t see how or why medicine is one of the few fields where free labor is ok after years and years of training
Probably not but I think it’s a common trend sadly.I think we went to the same residency?
Some people have empathy and compassion, so seeing endless patients with difficult circumstances could be quite wearing.I do not understand how a PMR doc gets burnt out. Plenty of money and relaxation.
I get the whole what's a Physiatrist thing.
I regret the complete lack of marketing from AAPMR/AAP in getting a message out to the public and other doctors on what a Physiatrist is and what we do. I have had patients think I was Psychiatry, PT, and Pain Medicine (there to just get drugs). Most PMR docs are too meek/mousy. We need voices. It is good working 7:30-3:30 M-F and not needing to look at charts/deal with issues on nights and weekends and out earn most folks.
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I wouldn't say a complete lack of marketing since I sit on the Specialty branding committee for AAPM&R. We have a consensus problem in our specialty some say they are pain, some sports, some brain injury, and no one can agree on the pronunciation of Physiatrist 😒 . We'll be Dropping a media Kit to help out members market themselves next year.I do not understand how a PMR doc gets burnt out. Plenty of money and relaxation.
I get the whole what's a Physiatrist thing.
I regret the complete lack of marketing from AAPMR/AAP in getting a message out to the public and other doctors on what a Physiatrist is and what we do. I have had patients think I was Psychiatry, PT, and Pain Medicine (there to just get drugs). Most PMR docs are too meek/mousy. We need voices. It is good working 7:30-3:30 M-F and not needing to look at charts/deal with issues on nights and weekends and out earn most folks.
😏
We don’t need help marketing ourselves. We need help in the public. No other specialty has this disgusting lack of anyone knowing who we are and what we do. Try and name any other specialty that any doctor can’t tell you what they do.I wouldn't say a complete lack of marketing since I sit on the Specialty branding committee for AAPM&R. We have a consensus problem in our specialty some say they are pain, some sports, some brain injury, and no one can agree on the pronunciation of Physiatrist 😒 . We'll be Dropping a media Kit to help out members market themselves next year.
I love being a physiatrist and feel that I genuinely make a difference every day. I do think the practice environment and job flexibility is a greater factor in burnout than specialty choice. Being able to choose who you treat, how you treat them, and When you treat them while being compensated fairly I think is the goal. PM&R has provided me with that opportunity and a set of skills that are diverse to survive the coming changes
I think need both grass roots effort and public effort. It’s easy blame the Acadamy but if the people in you hospital don’t know the difference between a PT or PM&R, or if the Ortho doc thinks they can replace you with a PA with extra training then you can’t blame the academy for not letting them know.We don’t need help marketing ourselves. We need help in the public. No other specialty has this disgusting lack of anyone knowing who we are and what we do. Try and name any other specialty that any doctor can’t tell you what they do.
True, but Hospice and Palliative Care is a “Sub-specialty” rather than a “Specialty.” In other words, you need to do IM, FM, Peds, EM, etc before fellowship training in Palliative. There are a ton of obscure sub-specialties that the general public and in some cases many physicians have no clue exist. But most people in these types of subspecialties have a “parent specialty” that is known by the general public and physicians (Internal Medicine, FM, Pediatrics, Neuro, Surgery, etc etc).Palliative. They had a similar problem as us but have been able to do a lot of education and lobbying. But again they are not split off in many pieces like us with numerous sub specialists. Public knowledge might be important locally or regionally but nationally we need the payors/hospital systems to know our value. But they do hand in hand.
True, but Hospice and Palliative Care is a “Sub-specialty” rather than a “Specialty.” In other words, you need to do IM, FM, Peds, EM, etc before fellowship training in Palliative. There are a ton of obscure sub-specialties that the general public and in some cases many physicians have no clue exist. But most people in these types of subspecialties have a “parent specialty” that is known by the general public and physicians (Internal Medicine, FM, Pediatrics, Neuro, Surgery, etc etc).
What is so odd about PM&R, is that it is a parent specialty that is so unknown and obscure to the general public. Although, I personally could care less about lack of prestige (in terms of the public not knowing/ understanding what your specialty is) or the awkward dinner party conversation of trying to explain to people what it is.
What I was most confused about as a med student (and other students were too) was what “bread and butter” PMR practice looked like since it seems like it overlapped with so many different specialties, and how that would impact job opportunities, patient base, etc. The only thing that I would slightly care about in terms of public/physician knowledge about the specialty is how it impacts patients/referrals, although it seems like it’s not that big of a deal.
I personally think medical schools should provide much more exposure to PMR. From my experience it has a lot of intrigue from medical students, but many in my class who had an interest, ultimately ended up choosing the other more traditional specialists, and I think it was mostly due to just greater exposure.
I don’t think you’re wrong, but this makes the gray beards tremble.We don't have an organ system that we truly own. That makes it tremendously hard to the lay person. Even in the outpatient ortho world they view us all (non-op and operative) the same, "Why can't the spine injection guy do my knee replacement. Aren't you a doctor???"
I think we need to drop the name and change to Rehabilitation Medicine or Functional Medicine as these encompass what we do above and beyond a single organ system. If we are insistent on keeping PM&R we need to change to Pain Medicine & Rehabilitation as every single sub-specialty deals with conditions that cause pain and we offer management for that (even if you aren't doing injections or opiate/med management). I'm still not sure what physical medicine is ... or who does it.
Brother/Sister - there may not be a single group in the world that I care less about than the AAPMR/RIC/Spaulding/Mayo/UW gray hairs.I don’t think you’re wrong, but this makes the gray beards tremble.
Change physiatrist to COVIDologist?But everyone has long Covid. Big money