- Joined
- Aug 25, 2007
- Messages
- 18
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 0
- Pre-Pharmacy
Obviously if you get into any medical field for the money you are getting into it for the wrong reason, and it will catch up with you.
true, but money is a big factor still. i guess what im wondering now is why would a person spend good seven years studying physical therapy and end up making around 70k (thats if you are lucky) when pharmacists and other medical graduates make twice that amount. i agree that helping other individuals is always a great thing, but again you could help people while earning a better salary. at least to make it worth going through the stress of medical school and paying high tuition.
I agree with the post above me.
I've been in school for a very very long time now and when someone offers to give me peanuts I get angry. I've worked just as hard in my opinion as anyone else in any other field. We've all tacked something challenging and tried to be the best at it.
Just to clarify PT is not as in demand as they have you think. I know this because I've spent a few months now looking for a decent job with a decent pay.
When obamacare rolls around and health care funding becomes a federal problem, trust me there won't be a demand for PT anymore. Look at Canada. Hospitals are virtually phasing out PTs as much as possible and replacing with Kinesiologists/PTAs - they have all the knowledge they need to walk patients and get paid half of our salary. Don't think the same thing won't happen in the US.
With all due respect, kinesiologists (whatever that is) and PTAs (who cannot function without a PT by law) can walk all of the patients they want. That is not what I do. If all a patient needs is to walk to increase their fitness level then it is not skilled and I don't see them.
If in Canada that is what PT has become, then a pox on you 🙂
PT is much more than that. It is a body of knowledge that is more capable than any to assess and correct movement dysfunction. I really don't know what a kinesiologist does or what their training is but I would wager that I know more about biomechanics than most of them do. I also know how to change the biomechanics, I know what certain tissues feel like at their end point etc . . .
People will start coming to the US for PT too if PT gets phased out. I can't see having an ACL reconstruction and having a PTA under the direction of an FP guiding their rehab.
sorry, got a bug in my bonnet
true, but money is a big factor still. i guess what im wondering now is why would a person spend good seven years studying physical therapy and end up making around 70k (thats if you are lucky) when pharmacists and other medical graduates make twice that amount. i agree that helping other individuals is always a great thing, but again you could help people while earning a better salary. at least to make it worth going through the stress of medical school and paying high tuition.
I'm living it.On the other hand, I can work 35-40 hours a week, make $70k-$80k a year, have a job that is stress-free and fun, and know that I am spending days, weeks, and months with grateful patients who love seeing results. Why would I take that away from myself....for a better paycheck? Ugh.