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Simple, doctors are overpaid
I met a neurosurgeon from Argentina that made the equivalent of $18,000 per year in US dollars. Does that sound more reasonable to you? minimum wage?
Rin says
Simple, doctors are overpaid
I met a neurosurgeon from Argentina that made the equivalent of $18,000 per year in US dollars. Does that sound more reasonable to you? minimum wage?
Well, a postdoc in biochemistry (post-PhD) earns $42K/yr, a physician's assistant avg is $90K/yr, senior chemical engineer is $110K/yr, pharmacist is $115K/yr, so there are plenty of examples of people, stateside, who're well educated and experienced, earning an array of regular incomes.
Rin says
You can earn over $200K, as a doctor, in places like Des Moines Iowa, nevermind the big coastal cities.
This is because no one wants to live there. The less desirable the city the more incentive needed to attract doctors. Some places are as high as $350K.
Ok, so now try to get an engineering job in Des Moines, at a pay rate, near any coastal city? Exactly, it doesn't exist. At most, one will be employed by Big Corn and probably at 50-60% of an east coast salary.
On the other hand, a new doctor can start off in Des Moines, pay off his loans in a few years, and then high tail it for Boston, afterwards. Wouldn't it be nice if we all had that option with our debts?
And yes, I'd live in Des Moines for a few years, if I had to borrow heavily for medical school.
Ok now it's spelled areas. Are you feeling better now? So can you answer a simple question? You haven't actually answered one yet.
"Of course the areas with greatest demand (i.e., highest prices) attract the most supply. The supply is there because the demand is there. If you were a doctor choosing where to live and work, would you choose the place where you can make twice as much $, or half as much"
So what does this mean? Of course? Twice as much what? Highest prices? Highest prices for what? I already asked if that was the highest cost of medical care per capita, the generally accepted benchmark worldwide for quantifying medical care. You said no that was the wrong reading, without any kind of explanation of the correct reading. Could you explain this convoluted statement in simple English for those of us that don't know how to spell area's. If I could relate your obscure terms to what is generally used by everyone else I could respond better.
bob2356 says
your assertion that a shortage of doctors is driving the cost of health care.
I never asserted a shortage of doctors. But, it is also true that the AMA lobbies for licensing restrictions that constrict supply. Other factors also reduce supply, for example the insurance system that drives many doctors to retire early in frustration. That doesn't create a shortage per se but it does reduce supply, increasing prices.
So you are saying a reduced supply to the point of increasing prices is NOT a shortage. That's not what they taught me in econ 101. Has the curriculum been revised?
"Why shouldn't we have unlimited immigration of engineers and scientists?"
Because all this means is we get flooded with Asian tech workers with fake degrees (I know they're fake because my wife's friend is one and she told us matter of factly that they fake the diploma and work experience. She helped my wife do the same!!!)
Think about that the next time one of them is cutting open you or your loved one in an emergency room...
That's what the interview process is for. My old boss used to put up post doc positions and get 200 fake applicants from China. It's pretty easy to spot. Anyone that hires one of them is a moron.
> The culture that promotes frivolous law suits will not go away. The malpractice insurance won't be any lower.
I wonder what percent of medical costs are used in some way because of the frivolous lawsuits. I have heard values anywhere from 4% to 25%.
>"In America, the insurance companies negotiated with providers (doctors and hospitals) to be "in network" and part of the deal was the provider had to charge triple to everyone "out of network," passing along the actual cost as an "in network" insurance "copay." It got worse from there,..."
curious2, you may be on to something.
the medical industry is a complete clusterf*ck and universal health care won't solve a thing. Most of the money that goes towards "health care" is actually paying for an endless trail of paperwork, approvals, referrals and other inefficient nonsense.
I'm not going to get into the payor system per se, since I agree it is messed up. And I'm sorry Capn shuddup had bad experiences. There are varying levels of quality in all professions.
However, OP clearly shows that he doesn't know what he doesn't know with his statement.
First off, physicians are not overpaid. In fact, GP's are grossly UNDERPAID for the amount of work they have to do. Shit, a mid level engineer at Google can make as much an FP in the midwest who sees dozens of patients a day and spends a good amount of time on the phone trying to get a couple bucks per visit from insurance.
OP, as for me, I get paid well and deserve every penny. Every single time I interact with patients, I deal with procedures which have the potential to KILL people. KILL them. Ask any of the parents whose children I've cared for, or patients on the brink of death from a heart attack or brain hemorrhage if I should be making what an engineer makes. This is lost on many laypeople and if you plan on getting into med school, you better get this fact through your typical engineer brain: People aren't Camry's or computer algorithms. Shit WILL happen and you're there to respond as best you can when it does and the responsibility falls on you. It's a level of stress that will be unmitigated throughout your career so don't fucking tell me a bunch of early 20 somethings sitting around bean bag chairs in Menlo park drinking overpriced Philz coffee, eating shitty new age "Asian" fusion food all the while trying how to exploit more of your personal information should be paid on par with physicians.
And don't give me that bullshit about PhDs. They live a charmed life. I dated one for a few months and her day started at about 9 and ended early afternoon. Are they smart? Yes. Brilliant? many are. But none of them are up at 3AM trying to save a 450# lady bleeding to death from a ruptured placenta.
It's hard. But even in those worst cases of self-inflicted illness, that's still probably someone's mom, daughter, wife, etc.
Facebooksux, comparing Google engineers or even hedge fund engineers { now re-labelled as quants/traders/money managers } isn't an appropriate comparison. For one, those jobs are geographically constricted and typically, it costs a lot more to live in Silicon Valley, Boston, or NYC over Des Moines Iowa where a nice 2 bedroom apartment is ~$650/month. And at the same time, these high mark up careers have tons of applicants. I believe if you wanted to move to Des Moines Iowa, as a physician, they'd welcome you with open arms. And true, ever since I'd left chemical engineering work, my routine 12+ hour days for pilot trials have gone down to 8-10 hours (IT related work) and now, with this hedge fund activity, it's even less at 8 hours (though I'm busy on weekends doing work for other persons) but at three times my prior engineering salaries. So I understand the expression, money for nothing, which is why I'll be leaving this field for medical school once I'm financially independent because it's not meaningful work, despite the fact that I'll be a millionaire doing it.
And finally, while I concur that emergency medicine/trauma doctors are the most stressed out workers, the avg GP doesn't work in the emergency room, all of the time. They work in regular clinics, where PAs carry out a lot of the patient interviewing, and then the MDs prepare to close out the cases, after a lot of the preliminary work is done. Yes, I have former engineering friends, who'd gone to medical school, and by planning their lives appropriately, they mostly live better lives than they did as engineers, where their hard work got them nowhere since MBAs control the work and compensation scale of science & engineering work. At the same time, just look at R&D cuts in DuPont, Dow, etc, and you'll see that it doesn't have much of a future. Of the engineers who'd made this switch, the only stressed out person was the one who'd gone into surgery. The others ... neurologists, dermatologists, GPs, and anesthesiologists, don't have the same dire conditions you've depicted. They like their jobs and appreciate their level of compensation for work expended.
Could you explain this convoluted statement in simple English for those of us that don't know how to spell area's. If I could relate your obscure terms to what is generally used by everyone else I could respond better.
Bob, so far your responses (sarcasm, no sources) sound like you're looking for a Jersey Shore GTL sparring match, which you can watch on TV if you want. It isn't my taste, so I'm not going to play researcher to your bombast. In reply to your latest flurry of rhetorical questions, here is a question that might really help: who controls the Medicare billing codes and payment rates? What is the American ratio, in quantity and price, of specialists to primary care? How do the American ratios compare to other countries? If you care enough to take the time to research the answers to those questions, and post links, you might find the results edifying.
I understand the expression, money for nothing, which is why I'll be leaving this field for medical school once I'm financially independent because it's not meaningful work, despite the fact that I'll be a millionaire doing it.
I wish you well in that. This thread has produced many interesting comments. I think the comparison to other science grads indicates that science is underpaid, and there doesn't seem to be much correlation between what is paid well (enlarging banks until they become TBTF, running an insurance company) and what is actually needed. Alas you may find the same even more true in medicine. The fee-for-service model, insurance distortions, and other factors tend to reward the most wasteful and even harmful allocations. I hope you will find a way to do good and make a living at the same time.
I am a doctor that was a grad student before medical student at a top university in a quantitive field. Medical school, especially the pre-clinical years kicked my ass. To think that a person with a 30 MCAT could just skip the preclinical years to the clinical rotation is absurd. There is a big difference between medical school, and other types of school. I used to think how easy it would be, but listen everyone in medical school is an A student with 30 on their MCAT's. Passing is the equivalent of getting an A in undergrad or grad school. Also, the cost of medical school is usually $50,000/year, and that cost has to be recouped with the loss of wages while you are in school training for close to a decade. Sometimes, I think if I had my job before med school I was able to put away a considerable amount of money, and would be in a surplus while right now I am still paying off debt.
Also, medicine has taken an incredible toll on my health and life. Not everyone can stay up every 4th night for years trying to save people. One can make more money in tech or other areas and have a more comfortable life. Medicine is not for the faint hearted. If you think you are up for it, then quit your bitching about doctoring, and get to it. I can assure you that your ideas will change after you go through the punishment that we have had to, and this isn't about some hazing process, but the demands of the profession.
There appears to be this notion that folks, who do graduate studies in let's say biomedical, electronics, and chemical engineering fields get to bed by 9PM and live the life. This is mostly false in any good program. On the whole, these former colleagues of mine were up until 11PM to 3AM, working on design problems, homework sets, labs, etc, all of the time. And the PhDs/postdocs, I'd worked with in applied chemistry, were in the facility from 9 AM to 11 PM, as a normal work week, with a break in there for lunch a/o dinner. Thus, I don't know what lazy folks you're talking about and their alleged charmed lives.
And next, in terms of the coursework for the first two years of medical school, did you fellows use a combination of mnemonics & Roman loci, to help memorize the data? Or did you expect that you'd be able to cram 12 textbooks in a year's time w/o any problems when you'd started? In addition, do you practice recall in intervals of 2 days-6 days-30 days, to help reverse the Ebbinghaus forgetting curve (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forgetting_curve)? You see, that's a memory rich curricula and there are ways of being prepared to be able to digest it. On the other foot, you can't cram/memorize for let's say, a Chemical Engineering Control's final, because you need can break the questions into their key components, find the hidden suppositions, develop the design methods, and finally, work out all the math in these steps.
" One can make more money in tech or other areas"
I'll say that one can only make more in finance a/o trading. And yes, a successful Futures Prop Trader is living the life. They typically have homes in the Hamptons and the Bahamas. In science/engineering fields, there's constant downward pressure on wages and the need to replace experienced persons with younger ones. If you haven't run into MBAs, then you don't know this. Today, thousands of DuPont (& Dow, & ATT, ...) engineers are out of a job and in a few years, you can add 4000 from NASA to that list.
As usual, most sound arguments here are being ignored by those too invested in their faulty opinions to listen to anyone else. So here is a simple solution for those who think Drs are overpaid. Don't visit them. Problem solved.
And next, in terms of the coursework for the first two years of medical school, did you fellows use a combination of mnemonics & Roman loci, to help memorize the data? Or did you expect that you'd be able to cram 12 textbooks in a year's time w/o any problems when you'd started? In addition, do you practice recall in intervals of 2 days-6 days-30 days, to help reverse the Ebbinghaus forgetting curve (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forgetting_curve). You see, that's a memory rich curricula and there are ways of being prepared to be able to digest it. On the other foot, you can't cram/memorize for let's say, a Chemical Engineering Control's final, because you need can break the questions into their key components, find the hidden suppositions, develop the design methods, and finally, work out all the math in these steps.
Again, you simply have no idea about what you don't know.
I agree that in terms of pure intellectual power, theoretical physics, quantum mechanics or some esoteric field of math that any a few dozen people on earth really understand trump the first two years of medical school. Yes, there is a LOT of memorization involved and while I've forgotten a lot of the basic science material, I still remember all of it in terms of broad areas and principles. This is enough to help with non-emergent problem solving and diagnosis.
Also, you're never going to convince anyone who's done both grad school and med school that the former is anywhere near as taxing as the latter, so drop it. Like vonah said, about a month into med school you're going to STFU about how easy it is and how anyone with a 30 MCAT can do it.
Only the market can tell if doctors are overpaid or not. Since the profession is heavily regulated, we will never know.
Yes, there is a LOT of memorization involved and while I've forgotten a lot of the basic science material, I still remember all of it in terms of broad areas and principles. This is enough to help with non-emergent problem solving and diagnosis.
Also, you're never going to convince anyone who's done both grad school and med school that the former is anywhere near as taxing as the latter, so drop it. Like vonah said, about a month into med school you're going to STFU about how easy it is and how anyone with a 30 MCAT can do it.
I'm in my mid-30s and I still remember most of my undergraduate course in biology because I used the Ebbinghaus principle in improving long term recall. Thus, despite not having heard "Klinefelter syndrome" or "Okazaki fragments" in years, that information hasn't been forgotten. Realize, I only took the general biology as I was an Applied Chem/Chem Eng major. I used graduated recall interval and that's all I needed to get an 11 on the biology MCAT at the end of college.
Plus, I never said that it would be 'easy'. It would be work, like everything else which requires hard work, to master. So yes, perhaps those first two years worth of courses need to be spread out, over a wider stretch of time, for those working in industry but hey, since you're indicating that engineers have too much time to spare on weekends, for barbecues and/or gaming conventions, then perhaps this is a way of staying in top mental shape for medical school later? Ultimately, it's about getting the points on the exam and if one can get the numbers needed for either an Honors, High Pass, or Pass (MD style grading), then maybe that's all the data one needs to determine if this person is adequate to study for an MD?
I can assure you that your ideas will change after you go through the punishment that we have had to, and this isn't about some hazing process, but the demands of the profession.
This is a significant issue, and I have to wonder about it. The "demands of the profession" in America seem to involve a lot more barriers to entry than in other countries, yet outcomes are not better here. I understand clinicians have worked hard and suffered and want to reap the rewards, but we seem to have a system designed to require people to overpay for "services" that they don't want or need, performed by over-educated professionals who are constrained by the "demands of the profession" to charge more than people in other countries would pay. By "over-educated," I mean in the sense Noam Chomsky would say, the most educated are the most indoctrinated. (Or as John Gotti would say, "over-educated and under-intelligent," meaning they're book smart but not street smart so they don't see what's really going on because it isn't taught in a textbook or graded on a final exam.) We have a medical academy bought by the Rockefellers and PhRMA, built on allopathy, that excels above all in generating $ not health. I hesitate to put it that way because clinicians might get defensive, but the numbers speak very loudly.
meaning they're book smart but not street smart so they don't see what's really going on because it isn't taught in a textbook or graded on a final exam.)
Book smart vs street smart is a problem, common throughout many over-educated fields, including other science and engineering specialties. In chemical engineering, a lot of non-linearities and anomalies, esp in multi-phasic conditions, exist and thus, they have design heuristics, which factor them in. End result, ppl believe in their tools and don't question or peer into their assumptions.
most sound arguments here are being ignored by those too invested in their faulty opinions to listen to anyone else. So here is a simple solution ...
And there also appears to be this sort of aegis, where it's implausible for a bright, hardworking S&E person, to learn the basic sciences of the first 2 years of medical school, without having first enrolled in the program.
If this was the case, then why does Georgetown allow their Special Masters students, who sat in with the medical students, to transfer into the MD class in year number two, if this wasn't a possibility?
Here's that program, http://smp.georgetown.edu/coursedescriptions/132250.html
And likewise, if a one year masters program is adequate for future MD admissions, why can't this spread out to other S&E areas of study, but w/o having to spend excess tuition money?
here is a simple solution for those who think Drs are overpaid. Don't visit them. Problem solved.
Not really. Federal law since 1951 prohibits buying Rx drugs without an Rx. (And don't even get me started on the "drug war" that prohibits cheap natural drugs while promoting fraudulently marketed overpriced Rx versions, e.g. OxyContin.) You can buy an assault rifle, but you can't buy contact lenses without an Rx. And, with mandatory insurance, you are required to overpay whether you visit or not.
People talk about Google engineers making $, but if you don't like Google you can always use ask.com or bing or Yahoo! Or you can search for information the old fashioned way, at the library. Google engineers help you find information more easily, but they don't prohibit you from getting the same information some other way. Imagine how much they might get paid if they could do that, and how people would feel about them.
If you think doctors make too much money, then consider a California highway patrol officer or the average police in California. Median wage of a cop is 130K + about 50K into their pension and the countless other benefits they receive, including their ability to retire at age 50. Look up http://www.sacbee.com/statepay/ and in the drop box look at california highway patrol to see their compensation if you think i am lying.
Not bad for only requiring a high school degree.
Why would anyone want to spend 4 years of undergraduate, 4 years of medical school and 5 years of residency to earn about the same amount, especially if you are 200k in debt after schooling and having to worry about all the malpractice lawsuits? Plus I dont think most doctors work 40 hours a week... 50-60 hours seems more the norm.
Oh btw if you think a doctor making 150k is too much, you may be surprised to see nurses making even more than that...
Oh btw if you think a doctor making 150k is too much, you may be surprised to see nurses making even more than that...
Those are nurse anesthesiologists and yes, it's a well paid specialty. The regular RNs, however, are clearly not in that bracket.
Physician anesthesiologists (MD holders), however, earn ~$337K with a salary spread between $250K and $450K, depending upon experience and location.
http://www1.salary.com/Anesthesiologist-salary.html
The two chemical engineers, I knew, who went into anesthesiology, never complained about their careers, once residency completed. ORs are scheduled, just like pilot plant trials, and the on-calls are twice per month, as a career average, after residency. And I knew non-engineers (other prior undergrad majors), who also went into this field. If you're willing to shoulder the responsibility of life support and pain management of a person in OR, then I can imagine it being a rewarding career.
And true, the lifestyle of the anesthesiologist resident is rough, prior to starting one's career. 80 hours is normal for those first three years.
BTW, both of these chemical engineers were at $65K-$80K per year prior to medical school, so again, it's not likely that one will earn a high salary in the old fashion, non-"dot-com/Web 2.0" tech vs being a doctor.
I don't understand why all the doctors who post here keep insisting that tech workers mainly earn like Microsoft engineers in the 80s, with huge stock options, or Google/Web2.0 engineers of today? In general, if you work in tech, as soon as you're in the $100K+ category, MBAs start to look for ways to get rid of you or send your R&D cost center to Asia.
Why would anyone want to spend 4 years of undergraduate, 4 years of medical school and 5 years of residency to earn about the same amount
In Massachusetts, once you add in 'details', almost every cop is over $100K. But think about this, one day, you may be staring down the barrel of a gun. Thus, there's a lot of competition and cronyism, to get into a nice suburban gig. But yes, that's a security job and one which is state mandated with great retirement benefits.
As for attending medical school, if you're a person who's good at studying and taking exams, could you name a better profession? Right now, new actuaries are not getting hired as before, as spreadsheet work is being slowly offshored and the established certified Actuarial Fellows don't want to share the wealth with newcomers. In the field of law, outside of Patents, few lawyers get hired by Big Law firms & seldom achieve a partner track. Thus, the options left are to either hang your own shingle (with zero experience), work as a paralegal (no partnership track), or hope for a govt gig. And MBAs in management consulting a/o finance, do not advance by virtue of exam taking skills. Those are BS artists, for the most part. Many persons with some academic bent, can be trained to perform in a health care like area and right now, our science and engineering graduates are best equipped, academically, to serve in ancillary health care areas.
Rin...
I realize how firm your beliefs are on this subject and there is likely nothing that anyone here can say to change your mind, nor do I really care so much to change your mind.
I'm a jr partner at a hedge fund, having left pure engineering (then IT), for a monied profession. I'll be applying for medical school, once I've banked my first $2-3M, as I don't see being a money manager, as a meaningful profession, despite the high compensation.
If you truly think it is that easy to become a doctor and that doctors are paid way too much, then you should definitely apply to medical school, go to residency and work as a doctor. Please update us after you have done all these things and let us know if you feel the same. Ill be waiting for your post in another 8-12 years. I do find it odd though that you want to go to medical school as a second or even third career, while over 50% of physician regret going into medicine due to the difficulty of the lifestyle and bad compensation
PS. I hope you will really have saved 2-3 million before you apply since you will have lost about 10 years of earning potential and will rack up 200k in school costs.
Logically, I don't see that the crazy increases in health care costs can be attributed to doctors pay.
Because doctors made as much (more really if you adjust for inflation) 30 years ago than they do now.
I do think that the profit motive in general doesn't have a place in health care, at least not in the direct sense where more money is always made if you do more tests and more procedures.
Logically, I don't see that the crazy increases in health care costs can be attributed to doctors pay.
Because doctors made as much (more really if you adjust for inflation) 30 years ago than they do now.
I do think that the profit motive in general doesn't have a place in health care, at least not in the direct sense where more money is always made if you do more tests and more procedures.
Marcus,
you are right. although costs in health care have risen, doctor pay has actually dropped, even without calculating inflation.
doctors in the US only make up about 8.5% of total healthcare costs, which is actually one of the lowest...
Logically, I don't see that the crazy increases in health care costs can be attributed to doctors pay.
Because doctors made as much (more really if you adjust for inflation) 30 years ago than they do now.
I do think that the profit motive in general doesn't have a place in health care, at least not in the direct sense where more money is always made if you do more tests and more procedures.
Marcus,
you are right. although costs in health care have risen, doctor pay has actually dropped, even without calculating inflation.
doctors in the US only make up about 8.5% of total healthcare costs, which is actually one of the lowest...
Glad to see this sensible and informative reply to a really misguided line of reasoning. You can name any trade or profession you want, but nobody short of some pretty high public authorities carries a higher degree of personal responsibility and personal liability (in the US) as an everyday physician. No lawyer, no cabinet minister, no professor, nobody, even though these folks may certainly earn more.
It takes years and years of long hours to learn a practice that has immediate impact on people's lives. You must be available 24/7. Make a mistake and you'll tell it to the jury. This function cannot be outmoded by the abusive marketplace-- so instead the HMO MBAs purposefully undermine the authority of doctors (insurance reviewers now wear white coats in hospitals) while ensuring that the doctors continue to bear the full responsibility for any outcome (the law is called ERISA).
Unless you do away with the massive doctor's headaches from trial attorneys and private insurance companies in the US, lowering doctor's salaries would drive those of us with skills into other work, and your care would suffer. Of course I would rather have both happen, but not the second without the first.
Bob, so far your responses (sarcasm, no sources) sound like you're looking for a Jersey Shore GTL sparring match, which you can watch on TV if you want. It isn't my taste, so I'm not going to play researcher to your bombast.
Bombast? I've just been asking time and again for a simple explanation of your statement. Obviously it's not going to happen. Just out of curiosity, how much research is involved in explaining your two sentence statement?
In reply to your latest flurry of rhetorical questions, here is a question that might really help: who controls the Medicare billing codes and payment rates? What is the American ratio, in quantity and price, of specialists to primary care? How do the American ratios compare to other countries? If you care enough to take the time to research the answers to those questions, and post links, you might find the results edifying.
If you've actually done the research you say you have then you have the answers. Instead of playing grade school playground head games feel free to have an adult conversation by putting the answers out there along with your analysis of why and how the answers affect the cost of medical care. Why are you fixated with links? A simple explanation of the how and why of the issues as you understand them would be a good start.
The only rhetoric is yours. The answer you provide to any question anyone asks is just a laundry list of rhetorical bullet points. I'm really wondering if you are actually the professor under another name.
Bombast?...Just out of curiosity, how much research is involved in explaining your two sentence statement?...Why are you fixated with links?...I'm really wondering if you are actually the professor under another name.
Bob, you need links because your memory drifts so badly, reinforcing what you want to believe. You never acknowledge errors and you never apologize. You also fail to understand causation, supply, and demand. You need links to anchor your arguments to actual facts. And no, I am not an alias for any other user account, if that's what you're really wondering. I'm also not someone who cares to waste a lot of time on you, especially when you get in one of your sarcastic moods with a blizzard of rhetorical questions and expect me to read your mind as to which (if any) you were really wondering about. If you think I've said anything incorrect, then present a source proving that.
Also, medicine has taken an incredible toll on my health and life. Not everyone can stay up every 4th night for years....
This is an argument against the hazing process, i.e. the barriers to entry. If the profession is unhealthy even for practitioners, that might explain some of the damage it does to patients - e.g. errors and nosocomial infections. You present your suffering as an argument for people to pay more, when in reality it is an argument for reform. A century ago, bakers worked in such unhealthy conditions that their average lifespan was under 50; that changed due to improved working conditions and shorter workweeks. Today, no profession should take "an incredible toll" on people's health, and it is paradoxically ironic and yet typical that medicine is doing so.
What is all this BS about who deserves more for what kind of work?
Shouldn't all be offer-and-demand driven?
IF I had the chance of being visited by a European doctor paying 1/3 of the price, I certainly would.
This is an argument against the hazing process, i.e. the barriers to entry. If the profession is unhealthy even for practitioners, that might explain some of the damage it does to patients - e.g. errors and nosocomial infections. You present your suffering as an argument for people to pay more, when in reality it is an argument for reform. ... Today, no profession should take "an incredible toll" on people's health, and it is paradoxically ironic and yet typical that medicine is doing so.
And that's just it, the MDs on this forum are arguing for their salaries, by justifying the status quo. They've bought into the current system, hook, line, and sinker.
And then, they argue against letting in others, despite the fact that there are intelligent and hard-working scientists and engineers who can score well on both the MCAT and USMLEs. Back in the 70s/80s, the Univ of Miami did offer spots in the MD class, for years 3 & 4, for outsiders with PhDs. That program was discontinued in '89, despite the fact that it was successful. Now, there are arguments being posted that this wasn't even a possibility to begin with. Here's the link to prove its prior existence ...
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20354390
Yes MDs ... please read the above. There was a 2 yr accelerated MD program in the past. And of course, you deny its existence.
Next, if so many doctors are fed up with 60+ hour work weeks, have they ever heard about 'moonlighting'? There's enough demand for MD services that doctors can work 3 days per week and still earn a $100K. In fact, a number of physicians, who'd decided to transition into research careers, moonlight 1 or 2 days per week, to supplement their postdoc salaries. One of which was a person who I'd worked under, back in my early days. And unlike these forum members, he didn't whine about his career in medicine. In fact, he was grateful that he had the opportunities to both see patients (part-time) and work in a research setting (he didn't need an additional PhD for that purpose). All I hear here is sour grapes about a profession, where there are lots of different ways of setting up one's work schedule. If you're an ordinary engineer [ chemical, mechanical, biomedical, electronics ], chances are that you'll be a full time W-2 or contract 1099 full time employee with little leeway, during weekdays, to do your own thing. And for that regimentation, all you get is a salary from $65K to $110K, and as soon as you're in the $100K category, MBAs will look for ways to lay you off and send your work to a cheaper cost center. Only in some sectors of IT, can one consult for half-time for half-pay. But the price for that is earning less than $50K, not good if you're building an egg's nest.
you're never going to convince anyone who's done both grad school and med school
Please then explain away this program at Univ of Miami, if grad students can't become MDs in a shorter time frame ...
If you truly think it is that easy to become a doctor and that doctors are paid way too much, then you should definitely apply to medical school, go to residency and work as a doctor. Please update us after you have done all these things and let us know if you feel the same. Ill be waiting for your post in another 8-12 years. I do find it odd though that you want to go to medical school as a second or even third career, while over 50% of physician regret going into medicine due to the difficulty of the lifestyle and bad compensation
PS. I hope you will really have saved 2-3 million before you apply since you will have lost about 10 years of earning potential and will rack up 200k in school costs.
First of all, I never said it was easy. Any science and engineering person knows that knowledge-based work takes effort and determination.
And then, if one's a bit older, let's say ages 48-53, what alternative work can you recommend? At that age, R&D centers don't want you because they'll point to the resume of a 35 year old with a C.V., exactly fitting a detailed job description. And then what about coding? Sure I can write for open source and be a type of internet persona but c'mon, that's for young adults & is much more a hobbyist field than a profession. You see, for most tech careers, once you hit your mid-to-late 40s, you're done.
Thus, losing 10 years of income means nothing if one's unemployed anyways.
So sure, I can simply retire out of the hedge fund business [ yes, it brings home the bacon, if not the entire pork bellies contract ] and spend the rest of my days in western Mass, volunteering at some of our antique shops or work at a Bed & Breakfast. But as a former engineer, that's a lame way to spend one's retirement years. I'd rather be actively seeing patients (even if it's moonlighting twice per week) and doing my own research, since I won't be needing to carry a grant to do so.
I can't resist chiming in here (I'm not a doctor, but I play one on TV). The first thing I want to address is the comment that our outcomes aren't as good as other countries despite greater barriers to entry. This argument is flawed, IMHO. Typically, people make these comparisons to countries with very homogenous populations. The US is a very large, heterogenous society. You just can't compare infant mortality rates here to that of Sweden. We aren't comparing like populations. And people from different parts of the world tend toward different issues. We are too varied a population to make a fair comparison.
Second, I'm always amazed when people say that doctors are overpaid.
It's easy to point the fingers at the doctors because those are the folks that you see. But the real crime is elsewhere in healthcare. Hospitals, insurance companies, healthcare attorneys, and pharmaceutical companies... These groups play a pretty big role in why healthcare is in the state it's in. Have you taken a look at what some of these people make? Lawyers are particularly impressive. Not all of course, but many make absurd salaries (well above most doctors) and they have absolutely no requirement to achieve a specific outcome. If they make an error, they are protected as a learned professional from anything but flagrant malpractice. A doctor is hardly in the same situation. If they genuinely misjudge something, or a bad outcome happens despite all best efforts, doctors are screwed. Hospitals and insurance companies are about business and the bottom line. Take a look at what a hospital administrator makes. A doctor's salary pales in comparison.
When you compare a doctor's salary in the US to that of a doctor in another country, you also need to consider the personal investment differences. How much does it cost to complete medical training in Ireland, for example? How much does it cost to complete medical training here in the US? Yes, newly minted medical graduates in Ireland start off making about 80k euro/year. But they have no student loans. I don't see how you can have it both ways. You expect someone to pay a fortune to achieve the required medical training, but then you don't think they should earn enough to pay it back?
Let's look at $150/year. You realize that after taxes and health insurance, you're looking at about $3,800 every other week? Okay, that's $7,600/month. Take a grand off for student loans and that leaves them with $6,600/month. It's not terrible, but it's hardly affording anyone the lavish lifestyle of the rich and famous. Again, look at the number of hours put in to earn that $6,600/month.... that's about $25 to $30/hour.
I'm sorry, I think you are barking up the wrong tree if you think that the doctors' salaries are to blame for the healthcare situation in the US. Although I'm sure that the insurance companies, attorneys, pharmaceutical companies, and hospitals are more than happy to see you focus your attention on the doctors.
Anyway... my 2 cents for what it's worth.
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I think it's time that we stop the lies and admit the truth, doctors are simply overpaid. GPs are at ~$150K while specialists and surgical specialists are from $200K to $500K. Most engineers and scientists simply do not have sustainable salaries of that amount and then, for those blowhards out there (you know who you are), stop bragging about your $200K salaries in Silicon Valley. You can earn over $200K, as a doctor, in places like Des Moines Iowa, nevermind the big coastal cities.
There are postdocs in both the physical and biomedical sciences earning $42K/yr and then, soon, another 4K+ NASA scientists will be unemployed and most likely, overspecialized for a future position outside of the Natl labs. FYI, many of those jobs are accounted for. Instead of re-training a/o re-assigning these talented individuals into becoming doctors, PAs, pharmacists, nurses, etc ... they have to compete against 20-somethings for limited freshman spots in some heath care program, if they want to find a career in a field with a lot of legislated protection. Yes, there's NO (typo, now fixed) free market, in terms of supply, in the field of medicine. Here's my solution, if one can score a 30 or higher on the MCAT, he/she should be able to transfer into the clinical years of an MD program, typically into year number 3. Yes, it should be a low cost program as those first two year subjects: biochemistry, physiology, anatomy, histology, etc, are in the public domain of knowledge. While one's working in industry, let's say a NASA subcontractor, one can study those subjects on his own and then, take the AMA exam which shows that one's qualified to become a doctor.