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I do too!😉
Really? How many months of inpatient do you do? How many months of L&D call?
Not being snippy, I'm really curious.
I do too!😉
This is how I see it:
ENT or Orthopaedics is like the super-hot, popular model. Money and a great life style is what you will get in return. Life with her is like a fairly tale, and "doing" her is as sweet as an American Pie.
Really? How many months of inpatient do you do? How many months of L&D call?
Not being snippy, I'm really curious.
Really? How many months of inpatient do you do? How many months of L&D call?
Not being snippy, I'm really curious.
How many months of inpatient do you do?
How many months of L&D call?
Luekocyte, you lucked out. I can't BELIEVE Tired didn't maul you for saying ortho has a great lifestyle. Beware in the future -- he's perpetually grumpy.
Finally, I just had to mention that it is very strange that JPP asked a question about primary care (about 3 fields...IM, FP, Peds) vs all the other (about 30 or so fields), yet many of the posters turned it into a FP vs Anesthesia thing. That is very, very strange.
I'm from Canada
I stopped reading right thereJust kidding.
It's funny you mention that Canada is moving to a privatized system. Because I really do think the US will move to a system like Canada's in the not to distant future. In general people in the US are more likely to support a free market but when the economy is so in the dumps and people are losing their jobs "free health care" and cheap medications sound pretty damn good.
So you're saying that Vets are bigger martyrs than Primary Care docs?
If anything, I think the US will have a low-tier public system mostly run by PAs, NPs, and any other cheaper primary-care providers courtesy of Wal-Mart. This system will be for the have-nots. Free/cheap for patrons, but lower quality.
Good question and I have a good answer. The traditional IM residency is very inpatient heavy. While FM is outpatient heavy. If your going to pay someone for outpatient services shouldn't it be someone who specializes in it?There will also be a very private high-tier system for those who can afford it. The real doctors will be housed here. Perhaps FPs will be able to make a bit of an inroad here, but why pay for an FP when you can have a general internist?
but why pay for an FP when you can have a general internist?
JPP claimed to be targeting students, yet he posted in a forum for FP residents and practicing family physicians.
It's also really not surprising that this thread degenerated into a flame war of sorts, given the title (which seemingly suggests the most important aspect of choosing a specialty is salary).
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te to specialty forums, and primary care forums prohibit med student visits?
2) I suggested that money is a huge issue for debt laden med students, no matter how much you choose to ignore it. Educational debt continues to spiral outta sight. Many students/residents lose sleep over their huge debt load, much in contrast to various rose-colored glasses opinions.
Of course, some people never let the facts get in the way of a good argument. 😉
😕
So, what should we do, Jet? Should we just leave our FM residency programs (which we enjoy), and switch to Anesthesia residency (which we do not enjoy)? Should we force ourselves to like Anesthesia because it is better paying? Should we really go into a specialty that we do not like, or care about, just for the money?
Most of us are in FM because we like FM. We do NOT care for IM, Peds, Psych...or Anesthesia. FM is a UNIQUE S-P-E-C-I-A-L-T-Y, and we like it. It is the BEST and most challenging medical SPECIALITY as far as we are concerned. And if we only get 150,000 for something we enjoy, then so be it.
Sure, there are going to be some paltry interventions: debt relief for those who choose FP. Horrible idea. This walls off the most lucrative specialties to all but the most wealthy of medical students, since tuition will be (is?) too expensive for the non-rich to afford medical school - especially a good one.
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Geez, dude...at $450K/year, you can spring for the Chick-Fil-A. 😉
There are only two things worth having at McD's...the coffee and the fries.
A few things. Med students by nature are competitive. Thus, when you leave residency, and see your colleagues (some of whom you were better than) earning more, and dealing with less than you, it bothers you.These threads make me sick:
For the person who was complaining about a FM doc ONLY having 55k a year to pay the bills, take care of family, etc: NEWS FLASH, the average person only makes around 35-40k a year, if that. Yes you had to go through 11 years of school to get that 55k a year, but as someone pointed out that is a CHOICE. And you made that choice so you could be doing something you LOVE, the average 35-40k person cant say that. I love how everyone tries to tell premeds that they cant go into medicine for the money, yet thats ALL med students (and doctors) complain about on here - not making enough. Also, the argument that I went to school for "x" amount of years, so I am ENTITLED to all this money, is crap. So what about Phd students? They go to school on average jsut as long if not longer than med students, and struggle to find jobs and make crappy salaries doing boring bench work. Then again, they dont have the debt you do, do they? Thats your other arguement. We accure x amount of debt, so we are ENTITLED to all this money. Again, that is crap. What about Veterinarians then? I read the Veterinarian forums daily, and I cant believe the difference in attitude between the vet forums and here. Veterinarians go to school for just as long (if they do a residency) and even if they dont they still go to school minimum of 8 years. They START OUT at 55k. None of this crybaby 55k after loans, taxes, etc are taken into account. 55k a year period. And Vet school tuition is right up there with Med Scool tuition. (Dont believe me, go look at OOS tuition for the various schools). You would think that Vets would not be able to survive AT ALL if Primary Care docs cant make it off of 150k a year. Heck they must be living on the street. Thats what I thought. But they are all making it just fine. Probably not living anywhere NEAR luxury, but they all LOVE what they do. I think the most astounding thing to me is that they make WAY less and have the same debt load (some more) and yet they never complain like these gold-digging med students do. All they do is say how happy they are to be in vet school, and how much they love what they are doing, and that they dont care about the money ( same with the veterinarians themselves). I actually remember posting in a vet thread similar to this one about how I couldnt believe that some of these kids were taking out 350k in loans to be a vet and though that was fiscally irresponsible. I still think it may be. However, if only we had more selfless kids like these vet students going into Human Medicine, healthcare would probably be a lot better. Instead we get these super smart doctors who dont care about patient care at all, just about getting fat paychecks and respect because they think they are entitled to it, but dont realize they have to be compassionate and GOOD doctors to earn that respect first.
1) If you were a med student interested in primary care, dontcha think you'd visit a primary care forum? 🙄 Or do med students interested in specialties just routinely visit and contribute to specialty forums, and primary care forums prohibit med student visits?
2) I suggested that money is a huge issue for debt laden med students, no matter how much you choose to ignore it. Educational debt continues to spiral outta sight. Many students/residents lose sleep over their huge debt load, much in contrast to various rose-colored glasses opinions.
Newsflash: I AM a medical student interested in primary care, but I spend a lot more time in the medical student forums. I also spend quite a bit of time in the lounge (where this thread would fit in quite nicely).
You claim this thread was aimed at students interested in any type of primary care, and yet only posted in this forum. If you want to reach all medical students, in the future why don't you try allo/osteo/clinical?
Wow. Yeah. I'd never thought about that before! In fact, NONE of my fellow medical students had ever thought about that before. We just thought the money was magically appearing in our accounts. But now that you've so kindly pointed out that we actually have to repay it, I'd better go into urology (they make like half a mil per year, don't they?). 👍
That said, I agree that many medical people do indeed have a very strong sense of entitlement that is regrettable. Honestly, I think there is a good number of people who start out in medicine with good intentions. However, through years of hostility, noncompliant patients, and deferred gratification, decide it might be just better if I advocate for myself and stop fighting the system. Basically, I put in all this work, I might as well start getting paid for it. Right? I don't know. But I think it's true.
Ask "Substance." He thinks that would be a "horrible idea" (post #364).
Of course, he's from Canada, and probably thinks Molson is good beer. 😉
This is quite the interesting discussion.
I can see no reason to currently go into FM in the present time.
I'm from Canada, so its a little different here. However, we are following the same path as the US: specialization of FM leads to those who do FM being tied down to the lowly-paid and respected field. Thus, with no options to leave FM for richer, better pastures, less people go into it in the first place. Once our healthcare becomes privatized, and it will, we will be in the exact same situation as the US.
Also, the advent of evidence-based medicine also bolsters the medical malpractice and insurance industries. Since "evidence" implies that there is a universal standard to which all patients must be treated, it is far safer to follow this evidence "cookbook" than to actually use brainpower to think of management plans. Thusly, FM becomes a "cookbook" specialty: if anything falls outside of the cookbook, it is referred to a specialist.
Now, "cookbook" medicine is essentially a trade: with enough training anyone can do it. This is where NPs, PAs, and the dreaded future DNPs come in. They follow the "evidence-based" protocol for the general patient without regard to true medical knowledge. Since it is cheaper to hire them, and they are willing to work "cookbook", their demand increases. Heck, in the nursing class they teach at my school, the students are taught that nurses can legally do 70% of what an FP does in his office.
Soon enough there will be no place for FPs except for in the most isolated of burgs.
The FP may wax prophetic about how a future without FPs is dismal, and that specialists will be forced to take up the general workload of the FP. This is untrue. The "mid-levels" mentioned above will pick up the slack, and in far greater numbers since you can hire 2 to 4 mid-levels for the price of one FP. If anything, people will have more access to primary care. More access to doctors? No. But more access to primary care? Yes, even if it is of lower quality. But that doesn't matter, since the people who count(rich people) will be able to afford a real doc at one of those concierge clinics.
The only solution for the FP is to politick the government heavily to increase reimbursements and to wall-off the influence of "mid-levels": however, you're gonna need a huge Libby Zion-like malpractice case to win that battle.
Sure, there are going to be some paltry interventions: debt relief for those who choose FP. Horrible idea. This walls off the most lucrative specialties to all but the most wealthy of medical students, since tuition will be (is?) too expensive for the non-rich to afford medical school - especially a good one.
FP is a dying field. Jump ship while you can.
HUH? DUDE, YA GOTTA PUT DOWN THE BLUNT.
Its my opinion that primary care attracts fewer med students because of spiraling student loan debt.
Admit it or not, like it or not, many, many med students don't even consider primary care because of their debt load.
Many, many med students would consider primary care if they didnt owe so much to Sallie Mae.
I fail to see how debt forgiveness is a bad idea. I certainly think it would go a long way in attracting more students into primary care specialties.
BTW, you comment on going to a good med school. What does that mean? Pragmatically, if one goes to a U.S. MD/DO school, by definition, thats a good one.
Residency and subsequent practice endeavors make a clinician.
Not the med school.
😕
So, what should we do, Jet? Should we just leave our FM residency programs (which we enjoy), and switch to Anesthesia residency (which we do not enjoy)? Should we force ourselves to like Anesthesia because it is better paying? Should we really go into a specialty that we do not like, or care about, just for the money?
Most of us are in FM because we like FM. We do NOT care for IM, Peds, Psych...or Anesthesia. FM is a UNIQUE S-P-E-C-I-A-L-T-Y, and we like it. It is the BEST and most challenging medical SPECIALITY as far as we are concerned. And if we only get 150,000 for something we enjoy, then so be it.
One novel and possible solution is a "primary care tax" to be placed on specialist receiving these 450,000 dollar salaries on the basis of primary care referrals.
Novel is debateable. It's definitely pretty radical. How would it work? And since anesthesia is the 'dark specialty' du jour what would we do about them, since they do not receive referrals from primary care providers?
Would the tax be levied based on the number of referrals a specialist received? This might create conflict of interest problems and would open the door for corruption and underhanded dealings. Specialists might incorporate with primary care providers to avoid paying the tax, or more specifically, to have the tax simply be reinvested in the practice. Take, for instance, a physician multispecialty group -- perhaps Kent can shed some light on that.
You might also want to beware that this could easily backfire on primary care physicians. Specialists will (obviously) not want to pay this tax, so they may lobby and find ways around the necessity of a referral. My insurance, for instance, allows me to see a specialist without a referral -- more insurance companies could pick up on that, if it's financially and politically saavy. Though I'd say wholesale extinction is unlikely, taxing specialists might mean they find a way to do without you.
Novel is debateable. It's definitely pretty radical. How would it work? And since anesthesia is the 'dark specialty' du jour what would we do about them, since they do not receive referrals from primary care providers?
Would the tax be levied based on the number of referrals a specialist received? This might create conflict of interest problems and would open the door for corruption and underhanded dealings. Specialists might incorporate with primary care providers to avoid paying the tax, or more specifically, to have the tax simply be reinvested in the practice. Take, for instance, a physician multispecialty group -- perhaps Kent can shed some light on that.
You might also want to beware that this could easily backfire on primary care physicians. Specialists will (obviously) not want to pay this tax, so they may lobby and find ways around the necessity of a referral. My insurance, for instance, allows me to see a specialist without a referral -- more insurance companies could pick up on that, if it's financially and politically saavy. Though I'd say wholesale extinction is unlikely, taxing specialists might mean they find a way to do without you.
why exactly are you posting on a Physician forum? That is the question of the day. Please enter medical school first, before you comment on the intricacies of Medicine and General Practice.
Is grandma going to know to go to a neurologist rather than a rhematologist? Does grandma know the differnece between a neurosurgeon, a neurologist or an orthopedic surgeon or which of these she requires? Would a neurologist, neurosurgeon, orthopedist, endocrinologist be able to screen patients and determine which specialist to send patients to and then send them away for the correct specialist. No way. It just doesn't work that way.
What we need to do is adjust the existing RVU system, which currently reimburses procedural work disproportionately more than cognitive work. If you address that, you'll address the income distribution inequity.
A few things. Med students by nature are competitive. Thus, when you leave residency, and see your colleagues (some of whom you were better than) earning more, and dealing with less than you, it bothers you.
Veterinarians don't deal with anywhere near the hostile environment doctors do. We endure lots more of everything.
People are much less uptight about their animals then they are about themselves. Again, this creates a much more stressful environment.
That said, I agree that many medical people do indeed have a very strong sense of entitlement that is regrettable. Honestly, I think there is a good number of people who start out in medicine with good intentions. However, through years of hostility, noncompliant patients, and deferred gratification, decide it might be just better if I advocate for myself and stop fighting the system. Basically, I put in all this work, I might as well start getting paid for it. Right? I don't know. But I think it's true.
Yeah, try being my vet school class where the average entering GPA was only a few short ticks off from the average entering GPA of Harvard Medical School with virtually identical pre-reqs (except pre-vet requires biochem). And I'm not going to Cornell or UPenn even! The average overall national acceptance rate into both vet school and med school are virtually identical as well (46% vs 44%). Yeah, we're not competitive at all. Surely not. 🙄
Ah ha, I knew there was a reason that our mnemonic in immunology for learning what immunoglobulins are made by what cells when: NAIVE B lymphocytes make Ig M and D. I love it when people who have no idea what they are talking act like they do. I find more people give more of a crap about animal's health than they do about their own. Here's the deal...contrary to popular belief, we do more than play with puppies and kitties, give shots, and do spays and neuters. Just because not everyone can pay for the procedure in their animals, doesn't mean it can't be done. There is one medicine, just different species.
I'm not saying you all shouldn't be getting paid. Of course not. I was pre-med myself for a long time, I know how it goes. However, I dislike this cry baby "OMG, I can't afford private school tuition, the country club, the Rolex, the BMW SUV, etc etc" attitude that you correctly pointed out when I'll be a veterinary medical doctor and will have had a fairly similar education. Well, to a degree...God, what I wouldn't give to NOT have a full year of in detail anatomy of over half a dozen species. That must have been nice for you all. I'm not begging for 450K. I just want enough to live comfortably, pay off my student loans, and have a nice well-equipped practice.
Man, I can't catch a break on this forum.
To answer your question, it seems to be widely agreed that medical school does not prepare you for the financial aspects of medicine -- in fact, that's one of the top complaints of practicing physicians. As such, being a med school graduate wouldn't prepare me to discuss such issues. At least not as much as my experience working for the National Institutes of Health and a private physician consulting firm.
I'm a big advocate of the free exchange of ideas. You're more than welcome to come post on the post-baccalaureate forum, if you have something intelligent to say. These issues FPs face now are the issues I'll be facing in a few short years, so I'd like to stay connected. Plus, Kent and I are Tidewater brothers.
My questions regarding the proposed tax were completely logical and appropriate. MedicineDoc understood that, and answered politely and intelligently. Ad hominem attacks are the lowest common denominator of human intellectual capacity. If you are, as you say, a med school student or physician, I hope you would expect a bit more of yourself.
why in the world would I want to post on the post bac form, or Bryn Von Mar forum where you clearly belong?![]()
Welcome back, andwhat. I'm sorry your last account got banned. If you could leave me alone, I'd be appreciative. I've tried to reason with you, but this is bordering on creepy.
?? come again?
Welcome back, andwhat. I'm sorry your last account got banned.
Hmmm. . . not sure andwhat got banned. But anyhow.
Man, I can't catch a break on this forum.