Anonymous wrote:I figure it would only take a year or two to figure out if you didn't like it. In that amount of time it would be fairly easy to go back to clinical medicine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here again. I don't need great pay. I'm happy with the better work-life balance. I looked at industry, but thought I would try this out for the experience. I actually think I may like it better and like the idea of keeping a clinic. I plan on doing the clinic one day a week. Can you actually moonlight for pay while working for the FDA? I figured there might be some conflict of interest or some other prohibition.
Thanks for the responses.
No people at the FDA teach classes or have clinic hours. The conflict of interest comes if you start consulting for drug or device companies or own stock in them.
Anonymous wrote:OP here again. I don't need great pay. I'm happy with the better work-life balance. I looked at industry, but thought I would try this out for the experience. I actually think I may like it better and like the idea of keeping a clinic. I plan on doing the clinic one day a week. Can you actually moonlight for pay while working for the FDA? I figured there might be some conflict of interest or some other prohibition.
Thanks for the responses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I'm in academics in a pediatric sub specialty. I am burned out on seeing patients. I have felt that I have lost some of empathy for my patients and really didn't like that. I also grew increasingly tired of my substantial call responsibilities. I talked to some people who had moved to Fed work (NIH, CMS, and FDA) and they seemed happy. Add that to the fact that there was a decent pay bump from what I was making and it seemed like a no-brainer, no call or weekend and more money. I guess it just seems like a big jump and I'm getting a small case of cold feet and wanted some reassurance.
Leave Children's National and leave DC. Medicine is broken here.
If FDA pays you more than clinical work, you are really really underpaid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I'm in academics in a pediatric sub specialty. I am burned out on seeing patients. I have felt that I have lost some of empathy for my patients and really didn't like that. I also grew increasingly tired of my substantial call responsibilities. I talked to some people who had moved to Fed work (NIH, CMS, and FDA) and they seemed happy. Add that to the fact that there was a decent pay bump from what I was making and it seemed like a no-brainer, no call or weekend and more money. I guess it just seems like a big jump and I'm getting a small case of cold feet and wanted some reassurance.
Leave Children's National and leave DC. Medicine is broken here.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I'm in academics in a pediatric sub specialty. I am burned out on seeing patients. I have felt that I have lost some of empathy for my patients and really didn't like that. I also grew increasingly tired of my substantial call responsibilities. I talked to some people who had moved to Fed work (NIH, CMS, and FDA) and they seemed happy. Add that to the fact that there was a decent pay bump from what I was making and it seemed like a no-brainer, no call or weekend and more money. I guess it just seems like a big jump and I'm getting a small case of cold feet and wanted some reassurance.