Anonymous wrote:Saw a news story about a radiologist who teleworks from home 100% of the time. That seems like a great job with fantastic pay.
Anonymous wrote:Right. See the problem with career trends is then the labor market for that career gets flooded, making the skill less valuable.
Not to mention, that is an area where the marketplace will seek over time to eliminate the possibility of human error (i.e. some of those tasks can be automated). Especially with online medical records, it will be possible for any alerts to automatically pop up (medicine contraindications) when a person goes to get a prescription filled.
Basically, my sense is that that is a job that will be less and less necessary with technology. If they can automate most of those tasks, then they basically just need a cashier, if that.
Honestly, I don't think it's the ticket.
Not so long ago, everyone said becoming a nurse was the ticket. And then as nursing salaries climbed, hospitals and medical offices started using medical assistants instead.
I think that risk is even greater with pharmacists as there is an even greater push toward e-medical records, automatic alerts (i.e. removing liability from drugstore chains).
Just my opinion, though. I've never been very impressed with pharmacists. They aren't very helpful, and most seem frustrated that, despite their education, their work environment feels like retail.
the exception would be hospitals or nursing homes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are many different roles for pharmacists. Not every one is in retail. There are clinical roles in a hospital setting, industry, poison control, and government. Salaries are high because it is a doctoral program and depending on setting, it can be family friendly.
I have a friend who is a pharmacist earning a lot of money working 6-2 every day.
the average pharmacist makes around $100K. Great salary but hardly "a lot" of money. In fact, you couldn't afford to live in most of DC on that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are many different roles for pharmacists. Not every one is in retail. There are clinical roles in a hospital setting, industry, poison control, and government. Salaries are high because it is a doctoral program and depending on setting, it can be family friendly.
I have a friend who is a pharmacist earning a lot of money working 6-2 every day.
the average pharmacist makes around $100K. Great salary but hardly "a lot" of money. In fact, you couldn't afford to live in most of DC on that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are many different roles for pharmacists. Not every one is in retail. There are clinical roles in a hospital setting, industry, poison control, and government. Salaries are high because it is a doctoral program and depending on setting, it can be family friendly.
I have a friend who is a pharmacist earning a lot of money working 6-2 every day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FYI a radiologist is a physician.
That is 4 years of medical school ( often costing up to 200k)
1 year of internship
4 years of residency
And 1-2 years of fellowship
Signed,
Someone who is annoyed that technologists parade around as a "radiologist" contributing to the confusion of the general public.
We know that. But at least there is some light at the end of the tunnel. Not true with many other jobs that require additional schooling and training.
Anonymous wrote:There are many different roles for pharmacists. Not every one is in retail. There are clinical roles in a hospital setting, industry, poison control, and government. Salaries are high because it is a doctoral program and depending on setting, it can be family friendly.
Anonymous wrote:FYI a radiologist is a physician.
That is 4 years of medical school ( often costing up to 200k)
1 year of internship
4 years of residency
And 1-2 years of fellowship
Signed,
Someone who is annoyed that technologists parade around as a "radiologist" contributing to the confusion of the general public.