Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Have the lucrative specialties changed?

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Strider_91
    replied
    This happened with the TFESI for interventional pain. Cataract surgery for ophthalmologist etc. I find it very interesting that these types of things have not "changed" the lucrative specialties. I guess people adapt and overcome.

    For interventional pain, where my mentor works, his practice bought into a surgical center because the facility fees are still decently reimbursed for TFESI and this offsets their losses for the declined reimbursement. Interesting that all of our TFESI are done in a surgery center but not a single facet injection will ever be done there. As I get more involved with medicine I see that it is a constant game of cat and mouse with the government/ insurance companies for the physician trying to make a living and in most cases patient care is not improved (sad realization for this doey eyed Pre-med).

    This goes along with what ENT doc is saying. It is unwise to hitch your wagon to a very narrow specialty wherever of your practice is based on one procedure or pathology because all it takes is CMS slashing reimbursement or a cure to be found and you're in trouble.

    Leave a comment:


  • VagabondMD
    replied





    Someone mentioned Moh’s surgery earlier. I would be concerned about hitching a career 10 years from now to the Moh’s gravy train. Procedures that pay excessively and skyrocket in volume tend to get squashed back down over time (volume and reimbursement), sometimes very suddenly. 
    Click to expand…


    Some Mohs surgeons have ruined it for the rest. I’m sure this happens in other fields too..
    Click to expand...


    Absolutely! And that's why I brought it up. Basing a career decision, ten years down the road, on the reimbursement of a particular (lucrative) procedure is unwise, IMO.

    Third party payers (especially CMS and the RUC) are constantly reviewing these anomalies for overutilization and overpayments and forcing down both, usually with a heavy hand.

    In my field (IR), IVC filters were for a long time ridiculously overcompensated. The reimbursement was established on an ancient code for operatively ligating the IVC. In round numbers, Medicare was paying the operator about $700 per procedure. These usually take about 10-15 minutes to place.

    This anomaly flew under the radar for most of my career. About 5 years ago, it was recoded and now pays about $200 for the proceduralist. I personally think that the pendulum swung a bit too far as these are often very ill patients, and there is a higher than average demand for off-hours procedures. Nonetheless, the change in reimbursement was swift and substantial, and this can happen for any procedure. (I have numerous other examples for IR.)

    Leave a comment:


  • Miss Bonnie MD
    replied


    Someone mentioned Moh’s surgery earlier. I would be concerned about hitching a career 10 years from now to the Moh’s gravy train. Procedures that pay excessively and skyrocket in volume tend to get squashed back down over time (volume and reimbursement), sometimes very suddenly.
    Click to expand...


    Some Mohs surgeons have ruined it for the rest. I'm sure this happens in other fields too.. Mohs is still cheaper (than any GA surgical procedure) and the most effective at curing skin cancer for the right skin cancer, size, and location.

    I interviewed at a private practice and saw this guy literally Mohs anything. I couldn't believe it. Maybe he was seeing if I'd be ok with sending him any case. There are established criteria when to use Mohs. Then there is the reconstruction - using a graft, flap etc - not always justified. Sad to see this happen - since it really does ruin it for the ones that really need it.

    Leave a comment:


  • WallStreetPhysician
    replied




    As an incoming M1 I get the advice to do what you love because who knows what the future holds but I know I can enjoy many specialties and given the choice I’m taking the one that pays more with a better lifestyle every time. My interest seems to be leaning towards a surgical sub-specialty, EM or Anes because I want to do procedures.

     

    When you were in school what were the top paying specialties and how have they changed? When did you graduate? What are the “odds” ortho, urology, or ENT just start paying less than other specialties in the future? What is the chance that FM or pediatrics starts to become compensated more than other specialties?
    Click to expand...


    To give some perspective, here was a summary of the MGMA report in 1997, and Becker's summary of compensation review in 2016. Things have mostly not changed (perhaps a bump for dermatology).

    I would note that anesthesiologists still make more than general surgeons (both in 2016 and in 1997). Maybe that's why the surgeons feel the need to be so bossy to the anesthesiologists in the OR...

    Leave a comment:


  • ENT Doc
    replied




    ENtdoc,
    Interesting thought about being a more generalized physician, I wouldn’t have thought about that on my own. I think a “generalized specialist” is probably the best bet in terms of expertise yet still having maneuverability. I have read a post from you about a head and neck surgeon being done for if they cured a certain type of carcinoma that makes up about 90% of their practice.

    It is my understanding that this is what happened to cardiac surgeons when interventional cardiologists started putting in stents.

    It is counter intuitive to realize that being general can be better especially when you factor in the opportunity costs of some fellowships. I also remember reading about this in Dr. Dahle’s book.
    Click to expand...


    Look at it like the market (to some degree).  Could a niche ETF soar?  Could it perish?  Sure for both.  The market portfolio only has systematic risk, scrubbing out the idiosyncratic risk of those niche investments.  Like Tom Cruise said in The Firm, "It's not sexy, but it's got teeth."  Maybe the generalist doesn't have his picture on a billboard, but he also doesn't lose his job when a CRISPR therapy dries up his practice.

    As for the Enlitic study, no doubt I am skeptical too about their (unpublished) results.  But the question is, where do you see this going?  If enlisted in a supportive capacity to start it's only a matter of time before someone tests its independent abilities.  Computers have a habit of getting better, not worse.  The more complex issue is that of malpractice.  If the techies want to tread into the medical realm and disrupt the industry I would also welcome them to absorb the downside risk of the lawyers and their class action suits.  As Bruce Willis famously said, "Welcome to the party, pal!"  Oddly, our greatest adversary (other than disease) historically may be our biggest ally moving forward.

    Leave a comment:


  • AR
    replied










    Longevity probably matters more than pay. Better to be a pediatrician for 30 years than burn out of dermatology in 10.
    Click to expand…


    The anecdotes in this thread notwithstanding, I think that burning out of derm in 10 years is an incredibly rare phenomenon.  Virtually impossible given how easy it is to find a part-time, well-paying derm job in almost any city in the US.

    I suppose it could be a definition problem.  If you say someone who wants to go from 50 pts 5 days a week down to 30 pts three days a week is doing so because of “burn out”, then I guess I can give you that.  I’d just say it’s someone who wants to cut back.

     

     
    Click to expand…


    Lots of anecdotes. Pediatricians burn out, too, just not as frequently as ER docs, for example, 72% vs. 46%, according to this study: https://wire.ama-assn.org/life-career/medical-specialties-highest-burnout-rates.

    Given the disparity in pay between the derm and the pediatrician, and the relative burn out chance, 67% vs. 46%, it’s probably better to make hay in derm while you can, all other things being equal. Of course, how the burnout manifests and what is the recourse or solution matters a lot, too.

    Someone mentioned Moh’s surgery earlier. I would be concerned about hitching a career 10 years from now to the Moh’s gravy train. Procedures that pay excessively and skyrocket in volume tend to get squashed back down over time (volume and reimbursement), sometimes very suddenly.
    Click to expand...


    Interesting link, but I think it brings up the question that I alluded to in my post.  It really depends on how you define burnout.  I skimmed your link and didn't see that they actually defined it (I could have missed it though).  The post I was responding to made it sound like it was referring to burn out to the point of not practicing any longer. In that sense, I think derm burn out would be rare.  With a broader definition of burn out, I'd guess that derm would have some just like every other specialty.

    Leave a comment:


  • VagabondMD
    replied







    Longevity probably matters more than pay. Better to be a pediatrician for 30 years than burn out of dermatology in 10.
    Click to expand…


    The anecdotes in this thread notwithstanding, I think that burning out of derm in 10 years is an incredibly rare phenomenon.  Virtually impossible given how easy it is to find a part-time, well-paying derm job in almost any city in the US.

    I suppose it could be a definition problem.  If you say someone who wants to go from 50 pts 5 days a week down to 30 pts three days a week is doing so because of “burn out”, then I guess I can give you that.  I’d just say it’s someone who wants to cut back.

     

     
    Click to expand...


    Lots of anecdotes. Pediatricians burn out, too, just not as frequently as ER docs, for example, 72% vs. 46%, according to this study: https://wire.ama-assn.org/life-career/medical-specialties-highest-burnout-rates.

    Given the disparity in pay between the derm and the pediatrician, and the relative burn out chance, 67% vs. 46%, it's probably better to make hay in derm while you can, all other things being equal. Of course, how the burnout manifests and what is the recourse or solution matters a lot, too.

    Someone mentioned Moh's surgery earlier. I would be concerned about hitching a career 10 years from now to the Moh's gravy train. Procedures that pay excessively and skyrocket in volume tend to get squashed back down over time (volume and reimbursement), sometimes very suddenly.

    Leave a comment:


  • AR
    replied




    Longevity probably matters more than pay. Better to be a pediatrician for 30 years than burn out of dermatology in 10.
    Click to expand...


    The anecdotes in this thread notwithstanding, I think that burning out of derm in 10 years is an incredibly rare phenomenon.  Virtually impossible given how easy it is to find a part-time, well-paying derm job in almost any city in the US.

    I suppose it could be a definition problem.  If you say someone who wants to go from 50 pts 5 days a week down to 30 pts three days a week is doing so because of "burn out", then I guess I can give you that.  I'd just say it's someone who wants to cut back.

     

     

    Leave a comment:


  • Rotish
    replied
    I can have a false negative rate of 0 too if call every case positive, ya know. Just probably gonna piss off some referring docs along the way.

    Color me skeptical when a 15 month old press release with earth shattering claims still hasn't managed to publish even preliminary data.

    I have no doubt that AI will only continue to improve. But I actually see it more as making my workflow easier than I see it kicking me to the curb

    Leave a comment:


  • Strider_91
    replied
    ENtdoc,
    Interesting thought about being a more generalized physician, I wouldn't have thought about that on my own. I think a "generalized specialist" is probably the best bet in terms of expertise yet still having maneuverability. I have read a post from you about a head and neck surgeon being done for if they cured a certain type of carcinoma that makes up about 90% of their practice.

    It is my understanding that this is what happened to cardiac surgeons when interventional cardiologists started putting in stents.

    It is counter intuitive to realize that being general can be better especially when you factor in the opportunity costs of some fellowships. I also remember reading about this in Dr. Dahle's book.

    Leave a comment:


  • ENT Doc
    replied




    What x Ray technology do you speak of?

    I’m a radiologist and this is News to me. All the boldest claims about AI are coming from Silicon Valley seeking investors and academia seeking grants. It’s certainly something to think about down the line, but the technology is nowhere close unless you like false positives approaching 100%.

    Not to mention, this type of doom and gloom isn’t limited to radiology (such as the robot that will take over the anesthesiologist).
    Click to expand...


    http://www.enlitic.com

    While their study isn't disclosed in a standard journal that I know of (yet) it beat out a 3 expert panel of radiologists working together to identify malignancies on CXR imaging.  More accurate.  Better false negatives.  While I'm sure there is plenty to poke holes in here, the writing is on the wall.

    Leave a comment:


  • Rotish
    replied
    What x Ray technology do you speak of?

    I'm a radiologist and this is News to me. All the boldest claims about AI are coming from Silicon Valley seeking investors and academia seeking grants. It's certainly something to think about down the line, but the technology is nowhere close unless you like false positives approaching 100%.

    Not to mention, this type of doom and gloom isn't limited to radiology (such as the robot that will take over the anesthesiologist).

    Leave a comment:


  • ENT Doc
    replied
    Strider, don't forget that technology can change everything.  What is high paying now doesn't matter - what appears to be well positioned given external market forces does.  For example, radiology may seem lucrative now, but there are already companies selling AI software that has been shown to be better at reading x-rays.  Do we honestly think CT scans and MRIs aren't next?  And do we honestly think that company won't price diagnostic radiologists out of the market and that this price won't be too small to ignore from an administrator's perspective?  Interventional radiology will hold up longer, naturally, as will other procedural specialties as long as you stay a generalist.  More narrow the focus = less ability to manage idiosyncratic risk.

    Leave a comment:


  • Strider_91
    replied
    Also I don't want to give the impression I am going into medicine for the money. That's not the case , I would still go to medical school if I won the lottery, just may work once a week when I finish though...


    I also would not choose a specialty based on compensation data alone but it is a factor.

    Lastly, I'm prepared to move if I have too, but I'd be more comfortable doing that for a specialty that doesn't require building a practice like EM. I could be completely wrong but that just seems like a very portable field. It would terrify me to move across the country and then become stuck there, like if I built a reputation as an orthopedic surgeon in the area.. Idk how those of you who have done that made that leap of faith.

    Leave a comment:


  • Strider_91
    replied
    Thank you to all this wise docs who have come before me and have taken the time to post their 0.02 cents. I am taking all of the advice into account and realize I am jumping the gun a bit and even sound naive/ neurotic thinking of a specialty an an incoming m1.

    Either way:

    My plan is basically to eliminate the lowest paying specialties from previous MGMA data and then try to get more exposure to the normal/ high paying specialties while in school. I like the idea of shadowing a different specialty each month; that seems reasonable.

    I am going to try my absolute hardest to crush all my classes and the USMLE obviously.

    Lastly I will try not to let the doom and gloom of sdn (a pre med/ med forum) consume me. You are all way better to get advice from.

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X
😀
🥰
🤢
😎
😡
👍
👎