PCPs are crying seeing this post.Our AAs are making $250K before bonus or OT. Bonus pushes them close to $300K 40hrs. No nights, call, or weekends.
PCPs are crying seeing this post.Our AAs are making $250K before bonus or OT. Bonus pushes them close to $300K 40hrs. No nights, call, or weekends.
Can you explain?You guys should be allowed to practice in every state. Our hospitalist service can't stand when surgeons working with CRNAs calling us to take care of patients in the PACU with "bad heart rhythm". Is that supposed to be the on-call hospitalist problem? Why should we be involved in these mess?
What’s an MDA?Wow! I am just an ophthal resident, but I dont see how MDA pay will not be adversly effacted in the long run by the passage of this bill. Serious encroachment.
It was used in the attached document that BLADEMDA attached, which was written by a CRNA. It was easier for me to use it rather than spell out anesthesiologist. Didnt think anyone would take offense to it. My bad.What’s an MDA?
I guess you’re an MDO as an Ophthal resident?
It’s a subtle way that CRNAs minimize our medical training. The term MDA is not a real thing and is typically used as an insult. I understand if you were not aware and no harm done. But I would erase the term from your vocabulary.It was used in the attached document that BLADEMDA attached, which was written by a CRNA. It was easier for me to use it rather than spell out anesthesiologist. Didnt think anyone would take offense to it. My bad.
I wanted anesthesiology when I started med school, but switched to ophthal during my M1 year. I have lurked on this thread for many years. I was curious about the latest happenings with the whole CRNA thing.Why is an opthal resident lurking in a forum on AA legislation for TN?
Multiple times surgeons (not CRNAs) call us (hospitalist on call) for patient in the PACU (yes, the PACU) to stabilize. It happened to me once and it has happened to a few of my colleagues. When it happened to me, it was a patient that would not "wake up". I just gave the guy a higher dose of Narcan than the dose anesthesia was giving him.Can you explain?
The surgeon is calling the hospitalist? Or
The crna calling the hospitalist?
Or the surgeon is calling the anesthesiologist to the pacu? That is the job of the anesthesiologist to take care and try to stabilize the patient in the pacu than call the appropriate service line (hospitalist or icu) or in some weird hospitals if patient was outpatient , than we gotta call the ER from the pacu (there are smaller hospitals) where I had to call the ER from pacu because there their policy (for patients not scheduled for hospital admissions due to their outpatient surgery which turns out to be needing further work up and inpatient won’t take them directly)
Unfortunately that’s medicine in 80% of the country these days.Multiple times surgeons (not CRNAs) call us (hospitalist on call) for patient in the PACU (yes, the PACU) to stabilize. It happened to me once and it has happened to a few of my colleagues. When it happened to me, it was a patient that would not "wake up". I just gave the guy a higher dose of Narcan than the dose anesthesia was giving him.
Here is the call: Ortho surgeon .'I just operated on a guy that would not wake up. Anesthesia has been trying unsuccessfully to wake him up for about 30 mins.' I said in my mind "WTF. Why is he calling me?" I asked him for the patient medical history over the phone and he told that he did not know. That was someone they took straight from the ED to the OR.
S[ ]ht happens at my shop. I remember when I just started working there, a surgeon operated on a patient, and the patient was sick in the ICU after couple days. He just washed his hands and told the nurse 'call the hospitalist on call'. The nurse called me. Went there and patient was in shock. I told the nurse to call him and tell him to call me and if not, I will not see the patient. Small city/town BS, man.
It's crazy that GI docs don't want to practice inpatient medicine anymore. The system seems to incentivize that kind of behavior.Unfortunately that’s medicine in 80% of the country these days.
We’ve become so disconnected with care.
Surgeons and even GI inpatient docs don’t even see their patient except shortly before their procedures and rarely have follow up They have the hospital employee PA or arnp see the patient before booking the procedure. So they aren’t even making the decision to book the original booking.
They don’t want to have to do anything with care outside of doing the procedures. Because procedures make money. Not follow up.
CAAs have been around more than 50 years, just not in TN.Wow! I am just an ophthal resident, but I dont see how MDA pay will not be adversly effacted in the long run by the passage of this bill. Serious encroachment.
Simple supply and demand.PCPs are crying seeing this post.
Your averages for both are way low. I was heavily involved in recruiting until I retired. Average starting salary for new grad CAAs is easily $200k, and significantly higher in places considered less desirable (pretty much anything outside bigger cities).I’ve worked several places with both and they were always paid significantly less. A quick search says average AA salary of 130-180 vs 205-250 for CRNAs. If AAs are getting paid the same then that changes the equation for me from a financial perspective.
- $525,000 Base Comp - 12 Weeks PDO
- $550,000 Base Comp - 10 Weeks PDO
- $575,000 Base Comp - 8 Weeks PDO
- + Extra Shift Pay
- $100,000 Recruitment Incentives
- $15,000 Moving Allowance
- $4,000 CME Allowanc
- 5 CME Days
- $1,600 Dues and Subscription Allowance • Malpractice Insurance Provided
- Benefit Guide & Retirement Plan
Is that a good offer for Anesthesia in rural America?
- Practice Details
- 6 Anesthesiologists
- 18 CRNAs
- 1 NP for PAT Clinic
- Dedicated CRNA OB Coverage Weeknights
- Call 1:6 @ Home Call; 5-6 Days/Month
- Weekday Call: 7 am - 7 am
- Weekend Call Friday, 7 am - Mon, 7 am
- Post-Call Days Off
- Weekend Coverage 1 MD; 2 CRNAs
- 8 ORs @ Main Hospital
- Main OR Runs 6-7 Rooms
- Available Upon Requests
- ~ 30 Cases/Day•
- 2 ORs @ Ortho ASC (1-2 CRNAs, 1MD)•
- 1 OR Urology ASC•
- 2 Endoscopy Rooms at Hospital, EGDs,
- Colonoscopies ~20-25/day•
- ~50 cases/day (OR, OB & Endo cases)
- • 40% Endo• 35% General Surgery
- • 20% Complex Ortho•
- 5% OB (C-section and Epidurals)
It’s way below average deal (100k recruitment bonus is likely 3 year commitment) taxed at 37%.
- $525,000 Base Comp - 12 Weeks PDO
- $550,000 Base Comp - 10 Weeks PDO
- $575,000 Base Comp - 8 Weeks PDO
- + Extra Shift Pay
- $100,000 Recruitment Incentives
- $15,000 Moving Allowance
- $4,000 CME Allowanc
- 5 CME Days
- $1,600 Dues and Subscription Allowance • Malpractice Insurance Provided
- Benefit Guide & Retirement Plan
Is that a good offer for Anesthesia in rural America?
- Practice Details
- 6 Anesthesiologists
- 18 CRNAs
- 1 NP for PAT Clinic
- Dedicated CRNA OB Coverage Weeknights
- Call 1:6 @ Home Call; 5-6 Days/Month
- Weekday Call: 7 am - 7 am
- Weekend Call Friday, 7 am - Mon, 7 am
- Post-Call Days Off
- Weekend Coverage 1 MD; 2 CRNAs
- 8 ORs @ Main Hospital
- Main OR Runs 6-7 Rooms
- Available Upon Requests
- ~ 30 Cases/Day•
- 2 ORs @ Ortho ASC (1-2 CRNAs, 1MD)•
- 1 OR Urology ASC•
- 2 Endoscopy Rooms at Hospital, EGDs,
- Colonoscopies ~20-25/day•
- ~50 cases/day (OR, OB & Endo cases)
- • 40% Endo• 35% General Surgery
- • 20% Complex Ortho•
- 5% OB (C-section and Epidurals)
Outstanding!...pride goes before destruction, a haughty spirit before a fall.
It's crazy that GI docs don't want to practice inpatient medicine anymore. The system seems to incentivize that kind of behavior.
For instance, my hospital has 2 outpatient GI docs and I was told thees guys are getting 800k+/yr. I am aware of someone they interviewed for inpatient (hospitalist GI) and they offered him 650k. Needless to say he rejected the offer.
thread should be titled GREAT DAY FOR TENNESSEE!!Good. I love it when the crnas try to practice to the fullest of their license crap motto. And look down on AAs.
Crnas mindset is
Crna=MD
Crna>AAs.
nah its not. CRNAs independence is the worst thing to happen to anesthesia.AA is one of the worst things to happen to anesthesia. You have people who have even less training and science background than crnas doing our job. It cheapens our field even more. If you've ever worked with aa's, you'll know they are the same as crnas in terms of attitude. Some want to be supervised, but a lot of them are annoyed they aren't practicing alone and restricted by their license.
LOL where are they going to go? you think that they will uproot their life and make moves because they want to die on a political hill?Seen multiple hospitals in southeast where AAs where hired and double digit CRNAs left. Several mednax facilities tried this 2017-2020. Failed terribly
Great to hear on the 1:4 for SC now. But…Right now in the Carolina’s large health systems are extremely short on CRNAs. Prisma, Musc, Atrium, Moses Cone, Mission, Novant, Duke, UNC. Why have they not hired AAs? Because just more CRNAs will leave and they’ve said that. Until enough AAs exist to replace a mass exodus it won’t be worth it for hospital administrations to apply.
Its like us calling you an optometrist because its easier to spell than ophthalmologist.It was used in the attached document that BLADEMDA attached, which was written by a CRNA. It was easier for me to use it rather than spell out anesthesiologist. Didnt think anyone would take offense to it. My bad.
7 figures means nothing without context of work load and weeks off.The GI docs I know are clearing 7 figures easily. One wanted to move to socal and it would have been a 50% pay cut for more work and less vacation.
Thats compiled from ChatGPT requesting as many references as possible. I agree the numbers are low realistically, but you can see the trend is that there are significant salary differences between the two.Your averages for both are way low. I was heavily involved in recruiting until I retired. Average starting salary for new grad CAAs is easily $200k, and significantly higher in places considered less desirable (pretty much anything outside bigger cities).
But again - same job description, same practice. Why should a CAA be paid less than a CRNA?
Thats compiled from ChatGPT requesting as many references as possible. I agree the numbers are low realistically, but you can see the trend is that there are significant salary differences between the two.
But again - thats the exact same argument CRNAs make to be paid the same as anesthesiologists. I've heard many CRNAs say that time and time again. How long until AAs start saying the same in that case?
I've always been a proponent of AAs but if its true they expect to be paid the same as CRNAs than that's definitely going to drive down compensation across the board.
What’s an MDA?Wow! I am just an ophthal resident, but I dont see how MDA pay will not be adversly effacted in the long run by the passage of this bill. Serious encroachment.
I meant to write: there’s no such thing as an MDA.What’s an MDA?
Are you talking about 1 wk on/off? You can't beat that schedule. I just don't get why there are a lot people who do not like it.It’s way below average deal (100k recruitment bonus is likely 3 year commitment) taxed at 37%.
So I look it at
525k/33k (558k) and 12 weeks off
608k (8 weeks off)
This is old fashion way to run a practice
Problems I have with place
Vacation weeks needs to be at least 26 weeks off with the demand of 24 hr calls for 600k. You time is very valuable
The 1 room ASC and 2 room ASC plus hospital kill the staffing ratios.
Look at the HUGE RED FLAG 5% ob means 300 deliveries a year but the red flag is dedicated ob coverage for weeknights only with crna. Mean Md is on the hook for a weekend ob coverage plus on call 72 hr. Red flag.
That’s 72 hrs on the clock there. And to be in rural America. And being taxed at w2.
I get a similar deal 500k/26 weeks (md only ob call in house ) off package in downtown urban area or 510k/20 weeks off zero in house , 14 hr beeper call WITH A CRNA AND NO OB. 62hr (not 72 hrs) beeper call every 5 weeks for weekend with crna.
The days of the standard q5 24 hr calls plus 72 hrs beeper call weekend and 8-12 weeks off for even 550k-600k are over.
Look me and 4 other docs each have 4-6 weeks off for the summer for our kids due to our massive weeks off. No fighting for summer break weeks off. Kid finished school last Wednesday. I took off to London immediately
I have 3 weeks off. Now. Than 4 weeks off in July. (I traded a week with another doc who doesn’t care) so he will have more weeks off in December) but even if I didn’t trade. I’d still have a min 4 weeks off.
This is the future of w2 MD staffing.Are you talking about 1 wk on/off? You can't beat that schedule. I just don't get why there are a lot people who do not like it.
That’s not worth 500-600k unless crna is primary call and Md is backup call.
GI at my hospital is doing 1.2, the other one is doing 1.4 millionIt's crazy that GI docs don't want to practice inpatient medicine anymore. The system seems to incentivize that kind of behavior.
For instance, my hospital has 2 outpatient GI docs and I was told thees guys are getting 800k+/yr. I am aware of someone they interviewed for inpatient (hospitalist GI) and they offered him 650k. Needless to say he rejected the offer.
Bump
The best. I kept my feet propped up on my pile of money and enjoyed watching the surgeons scamper to and fro.Hey murse! Did you get the good chair in the lounge today?