This job is going to remain unfilled for quite awhile. That salary is almost criminal. |
I was just saying that the journey is long but eventually we paid off our student loans and now saving. I was on DCUM while DH was still at the hospital operating. Then he comes home and often passes out. Our lives are not very glamorous at all. I am accustomed to living on a lower income so now we save at a high rate. |
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Internists, Medical Doctor
$90 per hour Hospital Internal Medicine, P.a. 2631 A NW 41st Street Gainsville FL, 32606 Contact Charles Wilson (352) 332-3893 http://visadoor.com/h1bvisa-I-200-16065-512249/medical-doctor-hospital-internal-medicine-p-a- |
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Neurologist, MD
Prevailing Wage - $90,646/Year Alegent Creighton Clinic 12809 West Dodge Road Omaha, Nebraska 68154 Contact Dr. D Randall Pritza (402) 398-5880 Hires H1Bs, cannot find US Residents at the prevailing wage for a Neurologist MD. http://www.myvisajobs.com/Wage/Case.aspx?ID=69582&Y=2015 and http://www.myvisajobs.com/Visa-Sponsor/Alegent-Creighton-Clinic/23035.htm |
NP here. I don't think the question is whether there are subspecialties that break $1M, it's when that happens in ones career. My Dad is an interventional cardiologist, also one of the highest paid subspecialties, he easily earns 7 figures/year. But even adjusting for inflation there's no way his salary had cleared that figure high enough by his early/mid-30s that he would have been able to save the equivalent of "a few million" by the time he was 40. And he is foreign born where the age of completing med school is younger, so he had a few years' leg up. |
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Abington Memorial Hospital
Multiple Specialties for MD 1200 Old York Road Abington, PA 19001 13 positions at prevailing wage of $80,791 to $141,000 for 2015 filed 78 labor condition applications for H1B visa and 24 labor certifications for green card from fiscal year 2013 to 2015. Contact Sondra Meder Administrative Director (215) 481-2000 smeder@amh.org http://www.myvisajobs.com/Visa-Sponsor/Abington-Memorial-Hospital/45039.htm |
Well of course they cannot hire a US neurologist foe that wage! The debt load in a neurologist is enormous. Just another example of abuse of the h1b visa program. Undercutting US workers. You should see what they do in the IT world. Disney got caught red handed and it's the tip of the iceberg. I hate donald trumo, but shit like this example will get his crazy ass elected. |
I'm not PP, but ortho spine (7 years) or neurosurgery (6 years) could easily accomplish this. Med school grad at 25/26, means spine surgeon at 31-33, and those guys BANK. |
Interventional cardiologists used to bank, put stent pay has been slashed. Your dad probably makes 6-700k max from clinical revenue unless he's employing an army of associates. |
I didn't thnik that foreign med school graduates could practice here directly without first going through a residency program. i think these are resident wages--and perhaps not so bad for that. |
Billing for spine is high as each surgery may be billed as if they are separate surgeries. These surgeries are also often the longest with high complication rates. Also probably the most elective as many suffer from back pain. I don't think you can compare cardio to spine. |
Pp here. DH graduated med school at 25, finished residency at age 30 and spine fellowship at 31. He did not break a million right out of fellowship but did a couple years out. And I said I was the breadwinner for over a decade. Half or more of our current savings are from my earnings, not DH. We have a little over $1 million in net worth now. Hope to save rapidly over next few years. Maybe we will only have $2m saved by 40 and not a few. I do think we can save a few though. |
Did you guys not do well in med school? For me, it is hard to imagine a physician barely scraping by in a crappy one bedroom apt where even the plumber is judging you. The reason certain subspecialties are competitive is because they are also well paid. That is probably why all those visa postings are listed above. An American educated physician is not going to want to move to Nebraska to earn sub100k after racking up 200k in med school debt. |
| The disparity of pay among physicians is what is criminal. It's all part of a skewed reimbursement system that values procedures more than cognition and actually taking care of patients. And it incentives itself by just ensuring that more procedures are done, some unnecessarily because they pay so much. The technical skills and training to be a critical care doctor and a spine surgeon are not that different. And one doesn't work harder than the other. But one makes 5 times more. Or even 10 times more. It's ridiculous. And some of it is sour grapes, sure. But it's difficult when you see the same guy in the middle of the night and he makes orders of magnitude higher than you because of reimbursement schemes set up decades ago. When he's not working harder than you and didn't train any harder. Stupid. |
So you think neurosurgeons don't have more technical skills than a critical care doctor? I strongly disagree with you. Procedures and surgery require more skill and they get paid accordingly. Maybe you think a consult ending with a script is the same a a 7hr surgery. |