That’s if you don’t fail or reschedule or just drop a semester or a year because of some circumstances It actually takes longer for some And med school while it’s 4 years in the US take into consideration that you need a bachelor before perusing an MD which that adds 4 years It’s wild
Speaking as a medical student ... It's not worth it. Better career paths for similar money and much better lifestyle. From med school and even in attending life you're on a nonstop hustle with little sleep and treated poorly by other medical staff and higher ups. Also insanely expensive to become a doctor.
Advance practice providers can make 100% of the physicians salary when they bill insurance Also, it can only take 7 years to become a PA or less than that to become an APRN
I got to know more about these different specialities alondside their paychecks ! Their time periods of residencies, their expertise & their work life balance hours ⌛. All these information I got in brief too ❤! Thank you very much Dr. Kevin Jubbal for such nice, useful & informative video👍🏿✌🏾❤😃☺!
Well considering if you’re not a Mohs surgeon, it’s all Clinic, it makes a lot of sense. All the ones listed a procedural heavy. Derm isn’t really. But salary is still great + lifestyle is great
@@skirmisher10most dermatologists I know of are procedure heavy for that reason. It's a bit silly to go off of general Derm salaries when most people go into derm with the intention of doing procedures in order to make good money while having good lifestyle
The procedures in Derm are not the type of “procedures” that pay very well. They’re mostly just biopsies. The attraction to Derm is the lifestyle, not necessarily the pay. They’ve never been the highest paid.
I heard somewhere that salary variance/range within a specialty (based on geography, practice type, etc.) is greater than variance/range between specialties. Wondering if you've done a video about this, or if you could speak to this someday!
If there's a 'Highest Paid Doctor' video, could there be a 'Lowest Paid Doctor' video? I've been searching this for a while now, but all I can see is the outdated version.
What undergraduate degrees are pathways to doctor of medicine graduate degree? I've seen that health science and biomedical sciences (bachelor's degree) for undergraduates upon successful completion can lead to further studies such as ( MD ) and a bunch other is that right?
Don’t ever say that about yourself. You can put anything you put your mind to. You just have to put enough work in and pray lol and everything will hopefully go your way 💗💗💗
As I’m sure everyone is aware, these salaries will vary GREATLY based on what you are looking for in your field. Where I trained, internal medicine hospitalist physicians STARTED at $430,000 per year with quarterly bonuses of 10% and the group had a 100% bonus rate at the time I completed my training, making their annual earnings at least $590,000 prior to the incentive pay, as well. Cardiologists were cleaning $800,000 and the neurosurgeons and CTS were well into the 7 figures. However, if you go to an established academic training hospital, then your pay will drop precipitously.
Which state did you work in, if you don't mind me asking? Also which hospitals (aside from non-academic training hospitals) offer these types of salaries?
It’s not the years you have to worry about my guy. It’s how hard you have to study day in and day out it’s something you can’t even comprehend until you go through it.
I've read that when hours worked are equated, the gap is much smaller, and many psychiatrists make as much or more per hour than surgical specialities. They just don't work as much, probably because they value their mental health lmao
Hey. I'm a high school student who may want to be a premed student if I can. I was wondering if I could suggest a video on the best specialties if you want variety in procedures and types of work? It's important for me to know that not only does my job save lives, but it also gives me variety so I'm not doing the same things again and again. I think that would also contribute to my burnout statistics.
OMFS 4 vs 6 year program - should have a video n this. Is it just a prestige difference? I see some job postings require the MD but honestly I don’t know if it’s needed 😊
A clarification about clinical cardiac electrophysiology. EP is a procedural subfield of cardiology. Most time is typically spent operating in the EP lab (e.g. catheter-based arrhythmia ablations, implantation of cardiac pacemakers and defibrillators) with a day or two spent in clinic each week. However, despite being a procedural field, unlike interventional cardiology, 3am calls are not typical of EP.
Yes it is possible and makes sense to do both in some ways taking on cases on the spine perhaps overlapping with the neck. But I don’t think residency programs like this intention they like dedication to a field and possible fellowship after for specialized stuff like OMFS can do specialization in head and neck or neck oncology or thyroid etc
Well yes, but that's with an average of $200,000 - $300,000 in debt, spending your 20s and early 30s in rigorous training, 60 hour work weeks, malpractice costs, and very significant job responsibilities compared to your average corporate office worker!
I know right? Dermatology has one of the best quality of life. Anesthesiologist I am guessing is not far from Nurse saturation and AI trials for it are currently being conducted to replace Anesthesiologist as a position. Who knows how long until it is approved
They didn''t. I'm not sure why he didn't post the current anesthesiology salaries. The starting salaries for brand new attending are well over 550K/year. There is a huge anesthesiologist short in the US at this current time.
He is probably using MGMA salary data. They use salary of physicians in hospital settings, private practice and academia to calculate the median and average salary of all specialties. Academia salary is usually around 20-30% lower and that tend to decrease the median salary. I don't know any anesthesiologist who makes < 500k/yr. A couple of them that I attended med school with are making 600-700k/yr working 50-55 hrs/wk.