Anonymous wrote:I know of some ER docs who set up a ketamine infusion clinic. It won't be remotely interesting or challenge your mind and skills, but they are making bank.
Anonymous wrote:My sister did this transition. She went from ER to hospitalist mostly in the ICU. Community hospital so they started using her where she was needed. She liked that speed better. She is in a big city and ended up running the sick line/appointments for a posh peds practice. She has great hours and pay.
Anonymous wrote:Urgent care.
University health system as a doctor or administrator.
Big pharma (although I have friends with PhDs and MDs who have been laid off on the last 1-3 years)
Telehealth
If you’re willing to travel and want a real change Doctors Without Borders. You could do this for 6-12 months then look into being a Health Advisor/ Technical expert for a non profit. When I worked in emergency response it was so difficult to get excellent health technical people.
Anonymous wrote:This is probably a troll although I don’t know why. Many (most?) emergency medicine physicians don’t spend their entire career in the ED, they burn out and pivot to something else. The OP should know PLENTY of colleagues who have moved on, in his or her own networking community, to get realistic ideas as opposed to from internet strangers on a parenting message board (not even docs Reddit)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Urgent care seems like a good transition and I bet they'd be happy to have somone with your experience. Kinda like an ER but with limited hours and also limited scope of services. I assume it pays less though.
Does urgent care even staff doctors anymore.?
Every time we go we get a NP or PA, maybe there is on doctor overseeing?
But anything remotely complicated gets sent to ER, so no doc may b needed?
I m a physician and I can tell you that when you have NP or PA saw you and a doctor never saw you , in the same visit, that s in reality, no doctor really overseeing you. It s just NP and PA.
The hospital system or the NP PA didn’t want to involve the doc because it take them more time and or they don’t know what they don’t know.
Could someone translate this gibberish, for those of us who didn't go to medical school but wasted our time on frivolous pursuits, such as learning to put together a coherent sentence?