Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cut back to 24hr a week now that med school loans are paid off. Enjoying having a life again. I’d work 40 hours if patients weren’t so miserable and management didn’t try to cram my schedule way past full.
Tell us your name please, since you consider patients to be “so miserable.”
Why the hell did you go into medicine?
Not PP, and not a doctor, but come on ... you know dealing with patients has got to miserable. It's akin to dealing with the general public with the added layer of people who are feeling sick or in pain etc.
Then again, why go into medicine? To rake in money and be called Dr.?
Because they are interested in medicine? How the body works, what goes wrong with it, and how to heal it? You aren't very bright are you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cut back to 24hr a week now that med school loans are paid off. Enjoying having a life again. I’d work 40 hours if patients weren’t so miserable and management didn’t try to cram my schedule way past full.
Tell us your name please, since you consider patients to be “so miserable.”
Why the hell did you go into medicine?
Not PP, and not a doctor, but come on ... you know dealing with patients has got to miserable. It's akin to dealing with the general public with the added layer of people who are feeling sick or in pain etc.
Then again, why go into medicine? To rake in money and be called Dr.?
By your logic , 80% of doctors would quit. Really. We love medicine and we love helping patients, but the patients themselves are often terrible and rude. Like you!
Except for PCPs, every doctor I know is a money-grubber.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cut back to 24hr a week now that med school loans are paid off. Enjoying having a life again. I’d work 40 hours if patients weren’t so miserable and management didn’t try to cram my schedule way past full.
Tell us your name please, since you consider patients to be “so miserable.”
Why the hell did you go into medicine?
Not PP, and not a doctor, but come on ... you know dealing with patients has got to miserable. It's akin to dealing with the general public with the added layer of people who are feeling sick or in pain etc.
Then again, why go into medicine? To rake in money and be called Dr.?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The number of doctors is kept artificially low. This is part of the reason there are too few doctors.
There are only about 25,000 medical school applicants admitted every year out of 50,000 applicants in a country of 350 million people. And don’t tell me about the Medicare funded residency spot caps keeping this low because I’m sure the AMA lobbies hard to make sure that isn’t raised either.
That's appalling -- if you assume each of those doctors works full time for 30 years (which they don't), that's still only one doctor for about every 450 people. That really doesn't seem like enough.
I do think the switch from majority male to majority female has made a noticeable difference. Almost none of the female doctors I know work part-time. And the men have all gone into higher paying fields or specialties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The number of doctors is kept artificially low. This is part of the reason there are too few doctors.
There are only about 25,000 medical school applicants admitted every year out of 50,000 applicants in a country of 350 million people. And don’t tell me about the Medicare funded residency spot caps keeping this low because I’m sure the AMA lobbies hard to make sure that isn’t raised either.
Anonymous wrote:The number of doctors is kept artificially low. This is part of the reason there are too few doctors.
Anonymous wrote:The number of doctors is kept artificially low. This is part of the reason there are too few doctors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm tired of NP being offered as a substitute for a MD.
When it finally caused me problems due to the NP getting multiple things wrong, I left my pcp's practice for a concierge one. It was pretty clear that the practice was so busy I'd never see my actual doctor again except for my annual physical -- and that needed to be scheduled 6 months in advance.
I don’t have one doctor who uses NP’s.
You are fortunate then. All of the hospital-affiliated primary care practices have been using them for years, and the last several years it ahs become very hard to get in with the MD. In October my pcp's office told me the first available appointment with my doctor for an annual physical would be in April. Unless I wanted to see the NP, which could happen right away. Nope. For multiple reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cut back to 24hr a week now that med school loans are paid off. Enjoying having a life again. I’d work 40 hours if patients weren’t so miserable and management didn’t try to cram my schedule way past full.
Tell us your name please, since you consider patients to be “so miserable.”
Why the hell did you go into medicine?
Not PP, and not a doctor, but come on ... you know dealing with patients has got to miserable. It's akin to dealing with the general public with the added layer of people who are feeling sick or in pain etc.
Then again, why go into medicine? To rake in money and be called Dr.?
By your logic , 80% of doctors would quit. Really. We love medicine and we love helping patients, but the patients themselves are often terrible and rude. Like you!
Except for PCPs, every doctor I know is a money-grubber.
You know, it’s funny. I have one cousin who is a corporate law firm partner in a large city and he makes over 5 million a year. And my sister is a cardiac surgeon and makes less than 1 million a year.
Which of these people is actually out there saving lives? “Money grubber” is not a word I’d use to describe physicians, if they wanted money they’d take their brains elsewhere .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cut back to 24hr a week now that med school loans are paid off. Enjoying having a life again. I’d work 40 hours if patients weren’t so miserable and management didn’t try to cram my schedule way past full.
Tell us your name please, since you consider patients to be “so miserable.”
Why the hell did you go into medicine?
Not PP, and not a doctor, but come on ... you know dealing with patients has got to miserable. It's akin to dealing with the general public with the added layer of people who are feeling sick or in pain etc.
Then again, why go into medicine? To rake in money and be called Dr.?
By your logic , 80% of doctors would quit. Really. We love medicine and we love helping patients, but the patients themselves are often terrible and rude. Like you!
Except for PCPs, every doctor I know is a money-grubber.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cut back to 24hr a week now that med school loans are paid off. Enjoying having a life again. I’d work 40 hours if patients weren’t so miserable and management didn’t try to cram my schedule way past full.
Tell us your name please, since you consider patients to be “so miserable.”
Why the hell did you go into medicine?
Not PP, and not a doctor, but come on ... you know dealing with patients has got to miserable. It's akin to dealing with the general public with the added layer of people who are feeling sick or in pain etc.
Then again, why go into medicine? To rake in money and be called Dr.?
By your logic , 80% of doctors would quit. Really. We love medicine and we love helping patients, but the patients themselves are often terrible and rude. Like you!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cut back to 24hr a week now that med school loans are paid off. Enjoying having a life again. I’d work 40 hours if patients weren’t so miserable and management didn’t try to cram my schedule way past full.
Tell us your name please, since you consider patients to be “so miserable.”
Why the hell did you go into medicine?
Not PP, and not a doctor, but come on ... you know dealing with patients has got to miserable. It's akin to dealing with the general public with the added layer of people who are feeling sick or in pain etc.
Then again, why go into medicine? To rake in money and be called Dr.?