Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of you are completely missing the opportunity cost to go into these different specialties. My wife is a liver/kidney/pancreas transplant surgeon and did 4 years of med school, 7 years of general surgery residency (5 years + 2 research years), and a 2 year transplant specific fellowship. 13 years after graduation with 9 of those years being paid very little.
Trust me, she would have made far more in other fields with how intelligent/driven she is, but she actually values helping her patients over $$$. This is just one example, but how is this worse than some random overworked investment banker or lawyer?
Her colleagues abroad make far less and their patients have better outcomes in a better system. They could also go into banking or whatever. No career is “owed” outrageous pay.💰
That is true but what is it in particular that leads people to post it here? Why not lawyers, insurance exs or tech bros? This is a constant refrain on here (that doctors make too much).
Because everyone goes to the doctor and we are all paying outrageous sums for insurance. And because we are all nerds we look at the insurance statement and see the doctor charged the insurance $800 for a 20 minute appointment. So we see the cost right in front of us, more than insurance executive pay or whatever else.
Then clearly you are smart enough to read the EOB and see they aren't actually getting paid that amount.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of you are completely missing the opportunity cost to go into these different specialties. My wife is a liver/kidney/pancreas transplant surgeon and did 4 years of med school, 7 years of general surgery residency (5 years + 2 research years), and a 2 year transplant specific fellowship. 13 years after graduation with 9 of those years being paid very little.
Trust me, she would have made far more in other fields with how intelligent/driven she is, but she actually values helping her patients over $$$. This is just one example, but how is this worse than some random overworked investment banker or lawyer?
Her colleagues abroad make far less and their patients have better outcomes in a better system. They could also go into banking or whatever. No career is “owed” outrageous pay.💰
That is true but what is it in particular that leads people to post it here? Why not lawyers, insurance exs or tech bros? This is a constant refrain on here (that doctors make too much).
Because everyone goes to the doctor and we are all paying outrageous sums for insurance. And because we are all nerds we look at the insurance statement and see the doctor charged the insurance $800 for a 20 minute appointment. So we see the cost right in front of us, more than insurance executive pay or whatever else.
Then clearly you are smart enough to read the EOB and see they aren't actually getting paid that amount.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of you are completely missing the opportunity cost to go into these different specialties. My wife is a liver/kidney/pancreas transplant surgeon and did 4 years of med school, 7 years of general surgery residency (5 years + 2 research years), and a 2 year transplant specific fellowship. 13 years after graduation with 9 of those years being paid very little.
Trust me, she would have made far more in other fields with how intelligent/driven she is, but she actually values helping her patients over $$$. This is just one example, but how is this worse than some random overworked investment banker or lawyer?
If we all agree our healthcare costs are too high nationally, it makes sense we are more critical of provider salaries than IB salaries. Of course, maybe our costs aren’t too high, and this is just what it costs to have the kind of healthcare we want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of you are completely missing the opportunity cost to go into these different specialties. My wife is a liver/kidney/pancreas transplant surgeon and did 4 years of med school, 7 years of general surgery residency (5 years + 2 research years), and a 2 year transplant specific fellowship. 13 years after graduation with 9 of those years being paid very little.
Trust me, she would have made far more in other fields with how intelligent/driven she is, but she actually values helping her patients over $$$. This is just one example, but how is this worse than some random overworked investment banker or lawyer?
Her colleagues abroad make far less and their patients have better outcomes in a better system. They could also go into banking or whatever. No career is “owed” outrageous pay.💰
That is true but what is it in particular that leads people to post it here? Why not lawyers, insurance exs or tech bros? This is a constant refrain on here (that doctors make too much).
Because everyone goes to the doctor and we are all paying outrageous sums for insurance. And because we are all nerds we look at the insurance statement and see the doctor charged the insurance $800 for a 20 minute appointment. So we see the cost right in front of us, more than insurance executive pay or whatever else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of you are completely missing the opportunity cost to go into these different specialties. My wife is a liver/kidney/pancreas transplant surgeon and did 4 years of med school, 7 years of general surgery residency (5 years + 2 research years), and a 2 year transplant specific fellowship. 13 years after graduation with 9 of those years being paid very little.
Trust me, she would have made far more in other fields with how intelligent/driven she is, but she actually values helping her patients over $$$. This is just one example, but how is this worse than some random overworked investment banker or lawyer?
And other physicians in the world don't have opportunity costs, yet make multiple fold less than US doctors even after accounting for PPP differences?
Healthcare in the US is a sham. We pay out the ass for it so evryone from doctors to insurance execs can make millions of dollars in the field. Meanwhile, itnis bankrupting our entite country and becoming less and less accessible for millions of our citizens. The entire scheme in the US needs to be flattened.First, by getting rid of all of the bloat, then normalizing salaries so that they're in line with the rest of the world.
Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of you are completely missing the opportunity cost to go into these different specialties. My wife is a liver/kidney/pancreas transplant surgeon and did 4 years of med school, 7 years of general surgery residency (5 years + 2 research years), and a 2 year transplant specific fellowship. 13 years after graduation with 9 of those years being paid very little.
Trust me, she would have made far more in other fields with how intelligent/driven she is, but she actually values helping her patients over $$$. This is just one example, but how is this worse than some random overworked investment banker or lawyer?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of you are completely missing the opportunity cost to go into these different specialties. My wife is a liver/kidney/pancreas transplant surgeon and did 4 years of med school, 7 years of general surgery residency (5 years + 2 research years), and a 2 year transplant specific fellowship. 13 years after graduation with 9 of those years being paid very little.
Trust me, she would have made far more in other fields with how intelligent/driven she is, but she actually values helping her patients over $$$. This is just one example, but how is this worse than some random overworked investment banker or lawyer?
Her colleagues abroad make far less and their patients have better outcomes in a better system. They could also go into banking or whatever. No career is “owed” outrageous pay.💰
That is true but what is it in particular that leads people to post it here? Why not lawyers, insurance exs or tech bros? This is a constant refrain on here (that doctors make too much).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of you are completely missing the opportunity cost to go into these different specialties. My wife is a liver/kidney/pancreas transplant surgeon and did 4 years of med school, 7 years of general surgery residency (5 years + 2 research years), and a 2 year transplant specific fellowship. 13 years after graduation with 9 of those years being paid very little.
Trust me, she would have made far more in other fields with how intelligent/driven she is, but she actually values helping her patients over $$$. This is just one example, but how is this worse than some random overworked investment banker or lawyer?
Her colleagues abroad make far less and their patients have better outcomes in a better system. They could also go into banking or whatever. No career is “owed” outrageous pay.💰
Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of you are completely missing the opportunity cost to go into these different specialties. My wife is a liver/kidney/pancreas transplant surgeon and did 4 years of med school, 7 years of general surgery residency (5 years + 2 research years), and a 2 year transplant specific fellowship. 13 years after graduation with 9 of those years being paid very little.
Trust me, she would have made far more in other fields with how intelligent/driven she is, but she actually values helping her patients over $$$. This is just one example, but how is this worse than some random overworked investment banker or lawyer?
Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of you are completely missing the opportunity cost to go into these different specialties. My wife is a liver/kidney/pancreas transplant surgeon and did 4 years of med school, 7 years of general surgery residency (5 years + 2 research years), and a 2 year transplant specific fellowship. 13 years after graduation with 9 of those years being paid very little.
Trust me, she would have made far more in other fields with how intelligent/driven she is, but she actually values helping her patients over $$$. This is just one example, but how is this worse than some random overworked investment banker or lawyer?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, I have no complaints about my doctors and that includes their salaries. They work their a$$es off and have provided me and my family with great care.
+1 I actually think most doctors are massively underpaid compared to other professions when factoring in skill level, value of service they are providing, years/cost of education, work/life balance, etc
PCPs are underpaid. Radiologists, orthopedic surgeons, and anesthesiologists are ridiculously overpaid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doc here. I left clinical medicine because the salary was rather low given my options. If I have to miss out on my kids life and my own life, I also have to maximize hourly compensation. Now I make more money doing something else. The expense of healthcare is not because of the doctors.
What are you doing now? Want to know as one family member who is doctor also interested in leaving clinical medicine.
Not the PP, but a friend that did this went to work for a VC firm. Always more money in finance.
That said, physicians are work horses. They have to be present to make money. Lots of easier jobs that you can outsource, work remote, have flexibility, etc.