Overrated Career: Physician 2009

December 11, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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The Appeal: You get to help keep people healthy and cure them when they're sick. Prestige is high, and so is the pay.

The Reality: Fewer and fewer patients see their physicians as godlike, especially those who go online for medical information. Doctors are spending less time than ever with patients and more on paperwork. Insurers keep hacking away at physician costs. And it seems increasingly more likely that physician pay will decline as part of healthcare reform. Also, their workload will more likely increase as the existing cadre of physicians may be required to care for the 47 million currently uninsured people in the United States.

And those are just the new problems. This career has long had other liabilities. The training spans more than a decade, including four years of science-heavy college coursework, four demanding, expensive (often $200,000) years of medical school, followed by an internship year of 90-plus hours a week, and capped by a few years of residency. After completing all that, there's usually the ongoing stress of managing your office, trying to care for noncompliant patients, giving unsuspecting patients bad news, and seeing some get sicker and die.

So it's not surprising that, according to a recent survey of primary care physicians by the Physicians Foundation, 49% of the 12,000 respondents said they would seriously consider leaving medicine within the next three years if they had an alternative.

An Alternative: Physician Assistant

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This article, and these comments are very interesting. I recently graduated with a 4-year, science-heavy, pre-medical bachelor's degree. I have been unsure about medical school since the beginning, because I want to be sure I am doing it for all the right reasons. It is a huge, lifelong commitment, but for the right people (those choosing this career for right reasons), the commitment will be worth it. I am just having a hard time evaluating if this is a good career choice for a 22-year old, recently married gal? My husband is 23 and in graduate school, and very soon, will also be entering medical school. I have considered MD/DO, but also PA, and even an accelerated nursing program that will allow be to get CRNA licensure to practice as a Nurse Anesthetist. I received a 4.0 in undergrad, so I feel that I am competent and able to do medical school... The question is, should I?! I'm in a difficult place right now, and need to make a decision. Any informed suggestions?? Thanks!

Kristen of WV 11:45AM February 15, 2011

I earn close to $200K/year as a psychiatrist.

The job opportunities are endless. I could literally throw a dart at a U.S. map and have a job w/in 50-mile radius within days. (I've done this, btw. I wanted to do some locums work in Virginia, put out a few 'feeler' e-mails on a Sunday night, and by Monday morning I had multiple voice-mails and e-mails offering me positions.)

Anyway, with the demand for physicians increasing (population increasing faster than production of physicians), the outlook is only getting better.

I'm surprised that, in this economy, US News and World Report would be dissuading its readers from such a stable, rewarding and lucrative career.

Kevin N. of HI 1:24AM October 11, 2010

One does not need to do " four years of science-heavy college coursework", a pre-med requisiute is required and you can major in anything and still get into medical school.

"49% of the 12,000 respondents said they would seriously consider leaving medicine within the next three years if they had an alternative"

"there's usually the ongoing stress of managing your office, trying to care for noncompliant patients, giving unsuspecting patients bad news, and seeing some get sicker and die."

Ok this is part of having a career in medicine. Not every medical doctor runs their own practice. Not every doctor's office I've been in is chaotic.Thats why there are hospitable adminstrators, managers and receptionists to manage the office. Certainly the health field since the human population is constantly growing.

Pulisetty of MO 8:51AM June 21, 2010

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