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- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!bnr.co.uk!bnrgate!corpgate!crchh327!crchh561!labiche
- From: labiche@crchh561.BNR.CA (Maurice LaBiche)
- Subject: Re: Physician's Incomes
- Message-ID: <1992Dec21.180910.12683@bnr.ca>
- Sender: news@bnr.ca (News on crchh327)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: crchh561
- Reply-To: labiche@crchh561.BNR.CA (Maurice LaBiche)
- Organization: Bell-Northern Research Ltd.
- References: <1992Dec18.232913.11952@netcom.com> <BzHCq9.FFo@icon.rose.hp.com>
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 18:09:10 GMT
- Lines: 77
-
- In article <BzHCq9.FFo@icon.rose.hp.com>, clw@hprnd.rose.hp.com (Carl
- Wuebker) writes:
- |>Devesh Bhatt states:
- |>
- |>> And I think that these computer industry jobs are equally demanding
- (50+ hrs
- |>> a week) as those of normal physicians, and probably more stressful
- because of
- |>> recent downsizings and daily changes in the technology and business
- goals. I
- |>> have several friends with MD wives that work less, have much less
- job stress,
- |>> and earn much more than their husbands.
- |>
- |> Bzzt. I don't agree. Comp Sci & EE types work to design & fix
- *things*.
- |>Physicians fix people. When I make a mistake, the consequence is
- usually time
- |>(if I'm lucky, it doesn't cost much & takes a few hours to fix). If, on the
- |>other hand, a physician makes a mistake, it can cost a life (or perhaps the
- |>quality of life) for somone. I believe that the extra pay (and
- limited medical
- |>school slots, and careful screening after training) has a lot to do with the
- |>responsibility a physician bears for human life.
- |>
- |> I don't have any illusions about physicians -- I know a few, they aren't
- |>perfect. But my friends do struggle with the "what ifs" a lot more than I
- |>do
-
- Maybe your not as detailed a programmer as many others. Depending on the
- type of system you work on/develop you have to handle real world
- system faults which could shut down the computer systems
- that control the electrical power grids or the 911/telephone service
- in your town. These are live systems relied on by the masses in
- normal as well as emergency situations. If these systems go out many
- lives can be lost.
-
- All Compupter Science and EE types don't work on little black boxes
- which have no real useful purpose except to crunch spreadsheets into
- some useful statistics, which has its own purpose.
- We all work under differing deadlines and pressures and in most instances
- I believe that Engineering can be as if not more complex than being a
- physician. Complexity is the nature of every engineering field, medical or
- otherwise. The body comes for the most part in only two different forms.
- Computer systems come in many forms.
-
- I'd have to differ with you on the careful screening after training issue
- you mentioned. Pratically any doctor can move from one state to another
- if they are having legal problems with their practice in their current
- state of residency.
-
- Why should Doctors get more money than other people? Cause they can.
- It's impossible to shop around for service when your dying. But more
- realistically thats the way it is, Dr's have a nice large lobby to
- try and keep it that way.
-
- Capitilism and Medicine. Live the reality. I do.
- Question for the day: "Where is money mentioned in the Hippocratic Oath?"
- Answer pending reply:
-
-
- -- what if I had prescribed the other treatment? Would the patient have
- |>lived?
- |>
- |>> It is not sour grapes, but a question of perennial demand and an AMA-
- |>> regulated supply. In a market-driven society, you have all the right to
- |>> enjoy this privilege---I would have too, had I chosen the medical line.
- |>> But please don't try to justify it on other grounds.
- |>
- |> Some aspects of AMA regulation (i.e. quality) are good for the patient.
-
- --------------------------------------
- Maurice LaBiche | labiche@bnr.ca
-
- "The world is a strange place."
- "Someone oughta sell tickets."
- "I'd buy one!"
-