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http://benbrownmd.wordpress.com/2010/06/20/informedconsent/
Discuss.
(Sorry if the article depresses you)
Discuss.
(Sorry if the article depresses you)
Should docs get paid more? The biased part of me says "Of course!" The answer is I don't know, it would depend on how much society values what docs have to offer. I do think that unless they are explicitly government employees, I'm not sure the government should have such a large part in how much a physician makes. Unfortunately, the government is heavily entwined in the fabric of modern medicine and I don't see anyone being able to put the toothpaste back in the tube, so to speak.
Well people will b!tch and moan at the slightest hint that we should stop FUTILE treatment on people with essentially ZERO quality of life to contain costs. They'll say no amount of money is worth someone's life. However these same people are usually not willing tp pay a dime for their healthcare and say that doctors are overpaid. So, our services are extremely valuable yet no oe wants to pay for 'em.
i'd be totally fine with what doctors make, if I-bankers and CEO's got paid a little less...
I think the inequity is within medicine, as I said. If you have $300K in loans and a couple of kids, would you choose to be a PCP making $100K per year or a GI doc earning $500K per year? Either there should be more equality between reimbursements or loan forgiveness for people who go into fields where more physicians are needed.
I think doctors deserve a good income because we do work very hard... but with limits. I think it's ridiculous that there are docs who earn half a million a year or more.
I think the inequity is within medicine, as I said. If you have $300K in loans and a couple of kids, would you choose to be a PCP making $100K per year or a GI doc earning $500K per year? Either there should be more equality between reimbursements or loan forgiveness for people who go into fields where more physicians are needed.
I think doctors deserve a good income because we do work very hard... but with limits. I think it's ridiculous that there are docs who earn half a million a year or more.
If Tom Brady and a handful of other athletes out there weren't getting paid 20 million per year to throw a piece of pigskin around, I'd be cooler with making less.
this is ridiculous.
A PRIMARY-CARE physician makes MORE money than 97% of the American population. Guys, just be happy with what we have, many take it seriously for granted. You have to realize that only 6% of american HOUSEHOLDS make more than 100k in America. The household figure includes both earners of the house. A physician making even 150k - 30k loans/year is still making 120k pre-tax. Thus, even the "lowest-paid" (peds, FP...) are still making more money than 97% of the American population.
The average household income (not personal income, but both earners in the house) is still less than 50k. even the lowest paid physician on average makes more than 3 times that himself, not to mention any wages from his/her partner.
I think you're ridiculous. Why is it that i-bankers can make several million without being called ridiculous? Why can CEO's make that money, when it seems like all they do is fire people to get bigger bonuses. As I said, doctors often provide a life-death service. They spend all of their 20's and most of their 30's in training. They should be paid very well.
You should have issue with PCP's making less money. Not with other specialties making more.
I think you're ridiculous. Why is it that i-bankers can make several million without being called ridiculous? Why can CEO's make that money, when it seems like all they do is fire people to get bigger bonuses. As I said, doctors often provide a life-death service. They spend all of their 20's and most of their 30's in training. They should be paid very well.
You should have issue with PCP's making less money. Not with other specialties making more.
You have to realize that only 6% of american HOUSEHOLDS make more than 100k in America.
Well people will b!tch and moan at the slightest hint that we should stop FUTILE treatment on people with essentially ZERO quality of life to contain costs. They'll say no amount of money is worth someone's life. However these same people are usually not willing tp pay a dime for their healthcare and say that doctors are overpaid. So, our services are extremely valuable yet no oe wants to pay for 'em.
Being around the top 15% is pretty crappy if you ask me considering how late we start earning, how many loans we have, and the hours we work.
this is ridiculous.
A PRIMARY-CARE physician makes MORE money than 97% of the American population. Guys, just be happy with what we have, many take it seriously for granted. You have to realize that only 6% of american HOUSEHOLDS make more than 100k in America. The household figure includes both earners of the house. A physician making even 150k - 30k loans/year is still making 120k pre-tax. Thus, even the "lowest-paid" (peds, FP...) are still making more money than 97% of the American population.
The average household income (not personal income, but both earners in the house) is still less than 50k. even the lowest paid physician on average makes more than 3 times that himself, not to mention any wages from his/her partner.
Yes but to be honest there's thousands of new people every year that can do a doctor's job...there aren't thousands of people every year that can run a billion dollar company. It's actually a pretty difficult job. A lot of egos/decisions/inspiration to handle.
I have to agree with Narmerguy. Getting into med school doesn't require a ton of intelligence. What it does require is consistency and hard work. None of the prereqs are hard conceptually. And there are a lot of people who put in that effort and still not get accepted each year. I completely agree with Narmerguy that it's easier to get into medicine than it is to successfully be a CEO/run a large company.Really? How do a lot of CEO's get fired after running the company to the ground and leave with 20+ million in their severance pay? If its really a free market, those executives should be sharing in both the benefits and risks of the company. I.E, if the company does poorly, they shouldn't get paid millions of dollars.
I have to agree with Narmerguy. Getting into med school doesn't require a ton of intelligence. What it does require is consistency and hard work. None of the prereqs are hard conceptually. And there are a lot of people who put in that effort and still not get accepted each year. I completely agree with Narmerguy that it's easier to get into medicine than it is to successfully be a CEO/run a large company.
this is ridiculous.
A PRIMARY-CARE physician makes MORE money than 97% of the American population. Guys, just be happy with what we have, many take it seriously for granted. You have to realize that only 6% of american HOUSEHOLDS make more than 100k in America. The household figure includes both earners of the house. A physician making even 150k - 30k loans/year is still making 120k pre-tax. Thus, even the "lowest-paid" (peds, FP...) are still making more money than 97% of the American population.
The average household income (not personal income, but both earners in the house) is still less than 50k. even the lowest paid physician on average makes more than 3 times that himself, not to mention any wages from his/her partner.
The faux noblesse oblige is a nice touch to the ignorant masses, but give me a break. Take a random sampling of 100 people in a city, and tell me how many of them would find a Hofmann rearrangement conceptually difficult. If organic chemistry isn't conceptually difficult, what is?I have to agree with Narmerguy. Getting into med school doesn't require a ton of intelligence. What it does require is consistency and hard work. None of the prereqs are hard conceptually. And there are a lot of people who put in that effort and still not get accepted each year. I completely agree with Narmerguy that it's easier to get into medicine than it is to successfully be a CEO/run a large company.
True, you have a point. I guess my experience has just skewed my view (ie. very few of the premeds I know in real life or those in my orgo classes actually tried to understand the concept behind the material...most just brute-forced their way via memorization...hey, I'm guilty of some of this myself). I don't have any hard evidence at hand.The faux noblesse oblige is a nice touch to the ignorant masses, but give me a break. Take a random sampling of 100 people in a city, and tell me how many of them would find a Hofmann rearrangement conceptually difficult. If organic chemistry isn't conceptually difficult, what is?
Large fonts notwithstanding, I work more than 97% of the population, I study more than 97% of the population, and I have more responsibility (when I finish as a surgeon) than 97% of the population.
But even then, wages aren't about how hard you work or how little the rest of the population makes. It's about how valuable your services are to the people who are paying for them. LeBron James was worth $100 million to Nike, and no one here can say otherwise. You might think that's too much money, but people don't pay people for services rendered if they don't think they are (or didn't think they would be) worth it.
The faux noblesse oblige is a nice touch to the ignorant masses, but give me a break. Take a random sampling of 100 people in a city, and tell me how many of them would find a Hofmann rearrangement conceptually difficult. If organic chemistry isn't conceptually difficult, what is?
Large fonts notwithstanding, I work more than 97% of the population, I study more than 97% of the population, and I have more responsibility (when I finish as a surgeon) than 97% of the population.
But even then, wages aren't about how hard you work or how little the rest of the population makes. It's about how valuable your services are to the people who are paying for them. LeBron James was worth $100 million to Nike, and no one here can say otherwise. You might think that's too much money, but people don't pay people for services rendered if they don't think they are (or didn't think they would be) worth it.
Prowler hit the nail on the head. mdc, you may think that the 12th man on the NBA bench doesn't contribute to society, but the NBA definitely thinks he is worth his salary. Do you think the NBA wants to pay a guy a ridiculous amount to sit on the bench? The bottom line is that society places a huge value on basketball and that is the determinant of his salary, not what the minority (you and I) think about his job.
Doctors are in a weird position in that our salary isn't really dictated by supply and demand. It would be a heck of a lot higher if it was (for most specialties).
What do you mean by the NBA? The owners think salaries are too high and that's why there is talk of a lockout. The only reason the bench guys get paid so much is because of the player's union. They are not getting paid a lot because of their value but because of their negotiating.
There were many concepts in organic chem that I never fully understood (a Hofmann rearrangement being one of them), but my approach to organic was to try to understand the concepts. At least in my class, you couldn't pass the professor's exams if you didn't get it at a conceptual level. I studied with a group of three other guys (who are all residents now) when I took the class in 2003 😉 and I know that they were all focusing on concepts more than memorizing 800 reactions.True, you have a point. I guess my experience has just skewed my view (ie. very few of the premeds I know in real life or those in my orgo classes actually tried to understand the concept behind the material...most just brute-forced their way via memorization...hey, I'm guilty of some of this myself). I don't have any hard evidence at hand.
Of course the owners think the players are paid too much 🙄 If they said anything else, the players would be idiots not to demand more money. When you go to a used car lot and check out cars, you offer the salesman less than you're willing to pay. Is that because you think it's worth that little? Or because you're trying to negotiate? "Talk of a walkout" = telling the car salesman "I have to go home and think about this."What do you mean by the NBA? The owners think salaries are too high and that's why there is talk of a lockout. The only reason the bench guys get paid so much is because of the player's union. They are not getting paid a lot because of their value but because of their negotiating.
There were many concepts in organic chem that I never fully understood (a Hofmann rearrangement being one of them), but my approach to organic was to try to understand the concepts. At least in my class, you couldn't pass the professor's exams if you didn't get it at a conceptual level. I studied with a group of three other guys (who are all residents now) when I took the class in 2003 😉 and I know that they were all focusing on concepts more than memorizing 800 reactions.
Of course the owners think the players are paid too much 🙄 If they said anything else, the players would be idiots not to demand more money. When you go to a used car lot and check out cars, you offer the salesman less than you're willing to pay. Is that because you think it's worth that little? Or because you're trying to negotiate? "Talk of a walkout" = telling the car salesman "I have to go home and think about this."
I've always hated that make more money than X% of the population statement. I was offered jobs out of undergrad for 80k starting. After 3 years, I'd have my MBA paid for by the company for wherever I got in and make 110k or so with lots of room for growth. I decided I wanted to be a doctor instead. That was 4 years ago now (I spent two years doing prereqs). So, I could theoretically be sitting on a 6 figure income with more earning potential to come, but instead I'm living in a run down 1 bedroom apartment where I don't even run my heat to save energy and don't have cable t.v. or internet (thanks linksys).
After another 2 years of paying to work my butt off, I get another 3+ years of residency where I will make some money finally. Not much, but at least I'll be in the black. I then get to start a job where I will only make slightly more and have people consistently whine about how much I make.
I've had relationships fall through. I've sacrificed countless weekends and evenings to stay in and study, or get a little extra sleep so I could study. I've given up or reduced the amount of time for things I used to love doing. "Treating myself" entails going to the movies and eating at a mediocre restaurant when many of my friends are jet setting around the world. The sacrifices I've made are far greater than what that 97% of the population has done. I signed up for it knowing that would be the case. I also don't think I'm "better" than them for it, but I do feel I deserve pretty friggin solid compensation for all the crap that I will go through. I don't expect to be a millionaire, but I do get a little touchy when people start talking about those "greedy doctors". Besides, the gap between that top 1-2 % and the rest of us is a lot greater than a general surgeon's income and a construction worker.
I've always hated that make more money than X% of the population statement. I was offered jobs out of undergrad for 80k starting. After 3 years, I'd have my MBA paid for by the company for wherever I got in and make 110k or so with lots of room for growth. I decided I wanted to be a doctor instead. That was 4 years ago now (I spent two years doing prereqs). So, I could theoretically be sitting on a 6 figure income with more earning potential to come, but instead I'm living in a run down 1 bedroom apartment where I don't even run my heat to save energy and don't have cable t.v. or internet (thanks linksys).
After another 2 years of paying to work my butt off, I get another 3+ years of residency where I will make some money finally. Not much, but at least I'll be in the black. I then get to start a job where I will only make slightly more and have people consistently whine about how much I make.
I've had relationships fall through. I've sacrificed countless weekends and evenings to stay in and study, or get a little extra sleep so I could study. I've given up or reduced the amount of time for things I used to love doing. "Treating myself" entails going to the movies and eating at a mediocre restaurant when many of my friends are jet setting around the world. The sacrifices I've made are far greater than what that 97% of the population has done. I signed up for it knowing that would be the case. I also don't think I'm "better" than them for it, but I do feel I deserve pretty friggin solid compensation for all the crap that I will go through. I don't expect to be a millionaire, but I do get a little touchy when people start talking about those "greedy doctors". Besides, the gap between that top 1-2 % and the rest of us is a lot greater than a general surgeon's income and a construction worker.
Guys and gals... There should be no debate on this one. Doctors should get paid as much as they possibly can. Medicine is an industry, like it or not. If you don't fight to get paid, they you simply won't get paid what you're worth. Everyone who works for money has to negotiate their compensation. In medicine, you don't get paid BEFORE you provide your service. You get paid AFTER (sometimes months after or not at all) the service is done and the cost and time are already spent. Why are family practice docs having a hard time keeping their private practices open? That's a shame. Why are the best and the brightest looking to other professions? That's a huge loss for society.
If doctors are charged with looking out for society and taking care of others, the least we can do is start looking out for and taking care of ourselves. Being the lamb is no longer acceptable when we know we're being surrounding by wolves. Time to man up and and get our heads out of of our idealistic asses. Health insurance CEOs are the highest paid CEOs out there... think about that and how that's possible while a pediatrician in private practice actually LOSES MONEY giving vaccines to school children.
We are easy targets, because we're "too busy" taking care of patients to concern ourselves with the larger issues that are affecting patient care. Our presence on Capitol Hill is laughable compared to the ABA, ATLA, or insurance lobbies. There are 26 administrators for every patient in this country. That alone is a testament to the amount of pillaging going on in medicine--a lot of people making money who have nothing to do with what the medical industry actually produces. And there's talk about cutting physician reimbursements? And there are young physicians who are "OK" with making $150,000 a year? Anyone in this forum who has a spouse, a couple of kids, a parent or two to take care of, a house payment, and a couple of cars knows that 150 Gs pre-tax doesn't get you very far--and God forbid you want to send your kids to private school... not a chance. Can I get a witness?
So what exactly can I (or anyone else) do to insure better compensation?
this is ridiculous.
A PRIMARY-CARE physician makes MORE money than 97% of the American population. Guys, just be happy with what we have, many take it seriously for granted. You have to realize that only 6% of american HOUSEHOLDS make more than 100k in America. The household figure includes both earners of the house. A physician making even 150k - 30k loans/year is still making 120k pre-tax. Thus, even the "lowest-paid" (peds, FP...) are still making more money than 97% of the American population.
The average household income (not personal income, but both earners in the house) is still less than 50k. even the lowest paid physician on average makes more than 3 times that himself, not to mention any wages from his/her partner.