Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear my friends in family practice and pediatrics talk about income inequality all the time, more so when neurosurgeons or ortho folks talk about their million plus monthly salaries and luxury cars. It makes one wonder if money was not a big factor, would many of these people still want to help humanity?
PCP from above. If the question is whether I’d do medicine for teacher pay the answer is no. But I’m okay with the current level of pay (basically all doctors make at least 150k). But you have to protect yourself as the system will try to take advantage of you. I would never take a lower paid speciality and have a bad quality of life. That makes no sense to me. I purposely made the trade off I made to be on the lower end and fought and ensured that I worked for a system that gave me the support I needed to have a good work life balance (MA support, call triage) and made it clear that family came first.
Anonymous wrote:Of course not. Why take on all that debt not to get paid. It's insane.
Anonymous wrote:Osteopaths are the JV of physicians. Lower board scores, many I knew didn't get into MD programs the first time around.
Anonymous wrote:Physicians are always concerned about income and often comparing wealth. Low paying specialties are always complaining and envying others. Would you want to go or send your kids into medicine if income spectrum was similar to teachers?
Anonymous wrote:I hear my friends in family practice and pediatrics talk about income inequality all the time, more so when neurosurgeons or ortho folks talk about their million plus monthly salaries and luxury cars. It makes one wonder if money was not a big factor, would many of these people still want to help humanity?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Think back on your high school classmates. For better or for worse, think of the students who later became teachers and those who later became doctors.
personally, while I see similarities in terms of wanting to help people and generally bring kind, good natured people, the doctors-to-be were notably more academically dedicated and successful, by a long shot. They the went on to highly rigorous premed tracks in college, followed by four years of medical school and years of residency and possible fellowships. This is quite different from the early entrance to teaching.
While there are always outliers, and I know several teachers personally who work tremendously long hours and of great impact, I don’t think there’s any real comparison in terms of what salary their skills and experience command.
I remember the premed kids as being grade grubbers and they would cheat - anything to get a good grade. Also fought to be teachers pet. They were not nice people
Anonymous wrote:Think back on your high school classmates. For better or for worse, think of the students who later became teachers and those who later became doctors.
personally, while I see similarities in terms of wanting to help people and generally bring kind, good natured people, the doctors-to-be were notably more academically dedicated and successful, by a long shot. They the went on to highly rigorous premed tracks in college, followed by four years of medical school and years of residency and possible fellowships. This is quite different from the early entrance to teaching.
While there are always outliers, and I know several teachers personally who work tremendously long hours and of great impact, I don’t think there’s any real comparison in terms of what salary their skills and experience command.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear my friends in family practice and pediatrics talk about income inequality all the time, more so when neurosurgeons or ortho folks talk about their million plus monthly salaries and luxury cars. It makes one wonder if money was not a big factor, would many of these people still want to help humanity?
No and most certainly not if are an ethinic (Indian, Asian, Persian, Jewish etc) of whom 99.999% go into it for two motivations: $$ and status. It’s mostly cultural. Not a racially biased post so go easy on me. Just reality.
Anonymous wrote:I hear my friends in family practice and pediatrics talk about income inequality all the time, more so when neurosurgeons or ortho folks talk about their million plus monthly salaries and luxury cars. It makes one wonder if money was not a big factor, would many of these people still want to help humanity?
Anonymous wrote:I hear my friends in family practice and pediatrics talk about income inequality all the time, more so when neurosurgeons or ortho folks talk about their million plus monthly salaries and luxury cars. It makes one wonder if money was not a big factor, would many of these people still want to help humanity?