Thank you very much for sharing your personal pay! This is very helpful information. Even though you made less one year because you wanted less weekends etc, it makes such a impact in the amount of time you can spend for you and family. I’m sure it was worth it! He should be happy 😊
@@YUMMAEH1 U r right, she's making appr. US$50,000 in comparison to $150-200,000 in the States when London is one of the costliest cities in the world where I used to live for yrs but decided to throw in the tower a few yrs ago where I get to keep 2 to 3x more for not being in London!
I liked the content of the video ty for the education and transparency but it made me kinda uneasy how she kept being interrupted, you can just cut it out or edit strategically if its too much, but let her speak!
Might be useful to mention that Evey's payslips don't include student loan repayments, presumably because she has none. These do make a non-trivial impact!
Hey Clarinda! Thanks a lot! Locum shifts are ad hoc positions that hospitals need doctors for to cover temporary shifts. A great way to get flexible extra work as and whenever you want
Hey guys, can you compare this with usa pay? In the usa doctors at her level regularly make over 300k usd as an opthmologist. I'm wondering if the quality of service in the usa is much better because of this
@@foodenthusiast2499 not sure but this is pretty common. Like podiatrist MD who is a food doctor makes an average of 280k usd in California. And that's on the foot. It goes way up from there. Anesthesiologist makes upwards of 600k.
The reason is that medical care in the us is privatized. So costs are very expensive. Focus is on profit by insurance companies. In the UK, medical care is provided through the National Health Service. Medical costs are minimal. Moreover university/medical school costs are minimal so doctors do not have US$200k+ in loan debt to worry about.