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A Doctor By Choice, A Businessman By Necessity
A Doctor By Choice, A Businessman By Necessity
Sandeep Jauhar, a cardiologist and the author of the recent memoir Intern: A Doctor’s Initiation, in NYT:
To meet the expenses of my growing family, I recently started moonlighting at a private medical practice in Queens. On Saturday mornings, I drive past Chinese takeout places and storefronts advertising cheap divorces to a white-shingled office building in a middle-class neighborhood.
I often reflect on how different this job is from my regular one, at an academic medical center on Long Island. For it forces me, again and again, to think about how much money my practice is generating.
...I recently spoke with a friend who dropped out of medical school 20 years ago to pursue investment banking. Whenever we meet, he finds a way to congratulate me on what he considers my professional calling. He often wonders whether he should have stuck with medicine. Like many expatriates, he has idealistic notions of the world he left.
At our most recent meeting, we talked about the tumult on Wall Street. Like many bankers, he was worried about the future. “It is a good time to be a doctor,” he said yet again, as I recall. “I’d love a job where I didn’t have to constantly think about money.”
I didn’t bother to disillusion him, but the reality is that most doctors today, whether in academic or private practice, constantly have to think about money.
More here
Sundeep Dougal
July 06, 2009 21:27 IST
A Doctor By Choice, A Businessman By Necessity
outlookindia.com
1970-01-01T05:30:00+0530
Sandeep Jauhar, a cardiologist and the author of the recent memoir Intern: A Doctor’s Initiation, in NYT:
To meet the expenses of my growing family, I recently started moonlighting at a private medical practice in Queens. On Saturday mornings, I drive past Chinese takeout places and storefronts advertising cheap divorces to a white-shingled office building in a middle-class neighborhood.
I often reflect on how different this job is from my regular one, at an academic medical center on Long Island. For it forces me, again and again, to think about how much money my practice is generating.
...I recently spoke with a friend who dropped out of medical school 20 years ago to pursue investment banking. Whenever we meet, he finds a way to congratulate me on what he considers my professional calling. He often wonders whether he should have stuck with medicine. Like many expatriates, he has idealistic notions of the world he left.
At our most recent meeting, we talked about the tumult on Wall Street. Like many bankers, he was worried about the future. “It is a good time to be a doctor,” he said yet again, as I recall. “I’d love a job where I didn’t have to constantly think about money.”
I didn’t bother to disillusion him, but the reality is that most doctors today, whether in academic or private practice, constantly have to think about money.
More here
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