Kool said:
whytho987654 said:
Tom Fox said:
TheWoodlandsTxAg said:
Tom Fox said:
GasPasser97 said:
Tom Fox said:
GasPasser97 said:
Tom Fox said:
Ag CPA said:
Too many lawyers as it is; unless you get into one of the top firms out of school it's a dead-end career.
This is a very definitive statement that is not entirely true. While I went to a top law school and spent a short stint at big law, my partners did not and they make high 6 figures in their mid 30s.
There are significant opportunities for conservative attorneys from top law schools. 2 out of 5 of my study partners worked in the first Trump admin. 4 out of 5 of us were offered jobs this go around but none accepted because we are all making too much money in our careers now to 10 years post graduation to take a 65-80% pay cut.
I should've gone to law school instead of medical school.
Top 5% of my med school class…any residency program I wanted…19 years in private practice and I'm making 1/3 to 1/2 of your colleagues in their mid 30s…
Depressing…
That doesn't sound possible, but I know very little about the business of private medical practices.
If you are suggesting the majority of doctors make upper 6 figures a year EVER…much less than in their 30's…prepare to be surprised
Obviously not in their mid 30s for doctors because attorneys graduate and enter practice at 25 or 26 and doctors not until 30 or so. But I was more surprised that a physician 20 years into their career would make less than $500K-$600K in private practice. They are essentially just selling their time like attorneys. Again I would think people would be willing to find the money to pay for their health or freedom.
I wonder if medical practice overhead is higher than a legal practice. But I bet it has more to do with government intrusion being more significant in skewing your market than mine.
My early Gen X family members make more than a million dollars a year as specialists in medicine.
Nice! That is more in line with what I was expecting from top end doctors.
I might consider running for Judge or DA at the end of my career but it is not economically viable for my family anytime soon.
Most docs dont make that... theyre in line with what gas was saying, and that's for specialists. PCPs make like 300, median doc pay is 350k or so.
Those here would not tolerate the training or lifestyle of most surgical subspecialties (aside from urology or ent), so not going to entertain that. The only docs I know with reasonable lifestyles who make 7 figures are dermatologists, radiologists, gastroenterologists, pain docs, that's all I can think of now. Doc pay would shock most of you here lol. Going into law/finance/engineering is a much better ROI
This is true. Just look at the data that was published in this thread, it is real world data.
As far as the number of years you give up, it is considerable. Mine was four years of medical school, two years of general surgery, four years of ENT, and then a fellowship year. 11 years after college before you are starting to pay off your debt and make a good salary.
What's worse is that the profession is being squeezed from above by insurance companies and CMS and from below by midlevel providers (NPs, PAs, etc.). Medicare has us slated for a 2.8% pay CUT this year. No concerns at all that our overhead has increased along with inflation, to the tune of 20%. Rents, employee salaries and benefits, supplies, EMR costs - everything except for reimbursement is going up. It's not sustainable, but people don't see it yet. I am in the final years of my practice, but I am glad that my son has absolutely zero interest in going into medicine. People don't know it yet, but it is going to get extremely difficult for Medicare and Medicaid patients to find providers (in many areas it already is), then it will spill into the rest of the populace. We will move to a two tiered system as the U.K. has.
On the mark. I think peoples perceptions of physicians are stuck in the 1980s. Many are now graduating with 300-400k of debt, and this admin is very hostile towards PSFL and REPAYE (which were options available and promised to those when they signed on the loans...), and wonderful RFK is on record saying he would like physician pay to be cut to European levels, what a joke. Midlevel creep and healthcare consolidation are also major threats.
And I don't think people realize how rough it is to be a surgical subspecialist like yourself, my friends in ENT work 5am-8pm, with q3-q4 36 hour call mixed in x5 years minimum, and I'm sure it was worse for you back in the day. My friends in finance/mid firm law complain about "long" 8 hour days where half the time they're bsing (and they're making 200-300k in their late 20s!). Im in a relative lifestyle field (pgy3 IR), and even I grind pretty hard, and my pay is roughly 63k with 240k of student loans.... Yeah don't recommend medicine lol
If a field has the pay get cut year after year with the rise of inflation, overhead and ancillary staff price rise, it is not a viable business option- that is medicine now. And private practice docs get reimbursed pennies on the dollar what a hospital does for the same office visit, same surgery, same MRI read, same procedure, etc. And you're right, people don't see it yet. I plan on doing locums for 5-6 years and trying to get into device patent design and have that be my career. Practicing medicine is a losing proposition going forward, which is sad because people will need care, and midlevels will be the only ones there left (they're terrible btw)