Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why people are mad about doctors working part time. I’m in primary care and for every 1 hour of seeing patients it’s about 30 min-1 hour of paperwork (returning lab results, paperwork, mychart messages etc.) so basically to keep work at a normal 40 hour work week you have to reduce your hours to about 28 patient facing hours a week. Look for me it was either part time or leaving medicine. Would you rather no doctors or part time doctors because I’d like (and I think my colleagues agree) to see my kids from time to time
Many professions require extra work. You think the teacher at the school down the street is getting time during her day to plan lessons or grade papers? She’d also like to see her kids from time to time.
I get your point, but you’re hardly the only profession that has a lot being asked of you.
You can be mad about it all you want but doctors vote with their feet. I refuse to work 80 hours a week (40 hours of patient care plus 40 hours of paperwork) so either you accept me part time or I leave. Same goes for many of my colleagues so I guess we settle for part time doctors. Not sure why you are mad about people wanting a work life balance.
Okay? And teachers are doing the same thing. Part-time teaching positions are rare, so they are simply leaving the profession altogether.
We all deserve a work/life balance. Your situation is no worse than people in many other professions. Be grateful part-time work is an option for you.
You asked why doctors go part time and I’m telling you why. If you want to be mad about something be mad at insurance companies that require all this paperwork. The only way to attract doctors into primary care these days is to offer a work life balance otherwise not one person would do it for the pay. So stop being mad at doctors who just want quality of life. It won’t get you anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why people are mad about doctors working part time. I’m in primary care and for every 1 hour of seeing patients it’s about 30 min-1 hour of paperwork (returning lab results, paperwork, mychart messages etc.) so basically to keep work at a normal 40 hour work week you have to reduce your hours to about 28 patient facing hours a week. Look for me it was either part time or leaving medicine. Would you rather no doctors or part time doctors because I’d like (and I think my colleagues agree) to see my kids from time to time
Many professions require extra work. You think the teacher at the school down the street is getting time during her day to plan lessons or grade papers? She’d also like to see her kids from time to time.
I get your point, but you’re hardly the only profession that has a lot being asked of you.
You can be mad about it all you want but doctors vote with their feet. I refuse to work 80 hours a week (40 hours of patient care plus 40 hours of paperwork) so either you accept me part time or I leave. Same goes for many of my colleagues so I guess we settle for part time doctors. Not sure why you are mad about people wanting a work life balance.
Okay? And teachers are doing the same thing. Part-time teaching positions are rare, so they are simply leaving the profession altogether.
We all deserve a work/life balance. Your situation is no worse than people in many other professions. Be grateful part-time work is an option for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why people are mad about doctors working part time. I’m in primary care and for every 1 hour of seeing patients it’s about 30 min-1 hour of paperwork (returning lab results, paperwork, mychart messages etc.) so basically to keep work at a normal 40 hour work week you have to reduce your hours to about 28 patient facing hours a week. Look for me it was either part time or leaving medicine. Would you rather no doctors or part time doctors because I’d like (and I think my colleagues agree) to see my kids from time to time
Many professions require extra work. You think the teacher at the school down the street is getting time during her day to plan lessons or grade papers? She’d also like to see her kids from time to time.
I get your point, but you’re hardly the only profession that has a lot being asked of you.
I support this 100%. Resist the system that has taken control of you. Maybe even unite with likeminded colleagues and fight the system that wants to replace you with robots, while they keep fleecing taxpayers.
You can be mad about it all you want but doctors vote with their feet. I refuse to work 80 hours a week (40 hours of patient care plus 40 hours of paperwork) so either you accept me part time or I leave. Same goes for many of my colleagues so I guess we settle for part time doctors. Not sure why you are mad about people wanting a work life balance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why people are mad about doctors working part time. I’m in primary care and for every 1 hour of seeing patients it’s about 30 min-1 hour of paperwork (returning lab results, paperwork, mychart messages etc.) so basically to keep work at a normal 40 hour work week you have to reduce your hours to about 28 patient facing hours a week. Look for me it was either part time or leaving medicine. Would you rather no doctors or part time doctors because I’d like (and I think my colleagues agree) to see my kids from time to time
Many professions require extra work. You think the teacher at the school down the street is getting time during her day to plan lessons or grade papers? She’d also like to see her kids from time to time.
I get your point, but you’re hardly the only profession that has a lot being asked of you.
You can be mad about it all you want but doctors vote with their feet. I refuse to work 80 hours a week (40 hours of patient care plus 40 hours of paperwork) so either you accept me part time or I leave. Same goes for many of my colleagues so I guess we settle for part time doctors. Not sure why you are mad about people wanting a work life balance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why people are mad about doctors working part time. I’m in primary care and for every 1 hour of seeing patients it’s about 30 min-1 hour of paperwork (returning lab results, paperwork, mychart messages etc.) so basically to keep work at a normal 40 hour work week you have to reduce your hours to about 28 patient facing hours a week. Look for me it was either part time or leaving medicine. Would you rather no doctors or part time doctors because I’d like (and I think my colleagues agree) to see my kids from time to time
Many professions require extra work. You think the teacher at the school down the street is getting time during her day to plan lessons or grade papers? She’d also like to see her kids from time to time.
I get your point, but you’re hardly the only profession that has a lot being asked of you.
Anonymous wrote:
Who wants to be constantly controlled by bureaucratic freaks planted behind their desks, while they collect exorbitant paychecks and demand elaborate security?
No one. Why sit in university when someone else is going to dictate how you’re allowed to breathe?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why people are mad about doctors working part time. I’m in primary care and for every 1 hour of seeing patients it’s about 30 min-1 hour of paperwork (returning lab results, paperwork, mychart messages etc.) so basically to keep work at a normal 40 hour work week you have to reduce your hours to about 28 patient facing hours a week. Look for me it was either part time or leaving medicine. Would you rather no doctors or part time doctors because I’d like (and I think my colleagues agree) to see my kids from time to time
Many professions require extra work. You think the teacher at the school down the street is getting time during her day to plan lessons or grade papers? She’d also like to see her kids from time to time.
I get your point, but you’re hardly the only profession that has a lot being asked of you.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why people are mad about doctors working part time. I’m in primary care and for every 1 hour of seeing patients it’s about 30 min-1 hour of paperwork (returning lab results, paperwork, mychart messages etc.) so basically to keep work at a normal 40 hour work week you have to reduce your hours to about 28 patient facing hours a week. Look for me it was either part time or leaving medicine. Would you rather no doctors or part time doctors because I’d like (and I think my colleagues agree) to see my kids from time to time
Anonymous wrote:The main bottleneck is in residency slots. You can build all the med schools you want, but that doesn't make a difference if someone cannot complete their training. Residency spots are largely federally funded, and Congress needs to provide more funding for this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From the article: "Medical schools have done their part by increasing enrollment by nearly 40% since 2002. We must now expand graduate medical education so we are training more doctors to meet the nation’s health care needs."
So are there a bunch of people who got their MDs but can't get residencies? What are they doing?
It's still like a 5% acceptance rate.
Medical schools aren’t doing squat about the shortage except maybe increasing their class size by a few or establishing tiny “satellite” campuses to pretend they care about rural medicine. No, they are reveling in the exclusivity too while raking in thousands in secondary application fees and making applicants jump through more and more hoops. They are too lazy and set in their ways to take on more students. They just want to keep phoning it in with pre-recorded lectures and group case presentations where the students teach themselves. And they fall back on the congressional residency cap to justify their actions. They also fight any attempt to build new med schools in the states where they are located so that they have less competition.
Anonymous wrote:The main bottleneck is in residency slots. You can build all the med schools you want, but that doesn't make a difference if someone cannot complete their training. Residency spots are largely federally funded, and Congress needs to provide more funding for this.