by Prince » Mon 19 May 2008, 01:56:11
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('RedStateGreen', 'T')hat's after a bachelor's degree, four years of medical school, and another three of residency (where you're paid less than minimum wage -- we figured it out in internship and it was $1.70/hour

).
You come out on average with $100,000 of debt, and that's your salary. For sixty-hour workweeks minimum, BEFORE call.
I'm engaged to a doctor, so I'd like to point out some of the blatant lies and misconceptions in your post. First off, I'm not sure when you did residency, but now they work 80 hrs/week tops, and that's usually only in Year 1. In years 2-4, they usually work an average of 60 hours or less. They are paid roughly $38,000 in Y1 and it goes up steadily to $50,000 by Y3-4. So given the worst case (Y1):
$38,000/(80hrs * 50wks) = $9.50/hr in the WORST CASE. Obviously, this is much higher than minimal wage. Adjusted for inflation, I'm sure your $1.70/hr is well above today's minimum wage, so either retake Math 101 or quit bullshitting us.
As for the bachelor's degree + medical school + residency argument, this is weak for a few reasons. First, everyone who goes to college gets a BS/BA degree, so now we're down to medical school + residency. Residency, we just learned, is paid well enough to survive comfortably, so now we're down to just the 4 years of medical school. A fair number of college graduates (non-medicine) today seek MS/MA degrees, so now the only real difference is 2 years of additional school for the medical student vs traditional college student. Couple that with the fact that the average college graduate still has debt, has far less job security than medicine, and might end up with a $45k/yr job if he's lucky, and that resident salary isn't looking so bad now, is it.
Your point on medical school debt is true; however, most doctors pay this off in a handful of years and have the means to do so without sacrificing much. But your point about 60/hr workweeks is way off. This is only true in residency. After that, they live on easy street. Maybe 50-60 hours a week on a bad week, which in today's society isn't too uncommon in the white-collar job market. Most engineers and business people put in well over 50 hours a week n the office. Also, doctors usually secure 8-12 weeks of vacation/yr, which is FAR better off than most of us will ever see in a lifetime. Add to the fact that an overwhelming number secure cushy university jobs after residency/fellowship where work weeks are even less. Also, there's something to be said about job security. From the minute they get into medical school they NEVER--NEVER--NEVER have to worry about being jobless or being poverty stricken.
My wife-to-be is well within those numbers posted above, and I hope for our sake socialized medicine never evolves in this country. My guess is that Obama will try it out and realize that it is a miserable failure. Besides, the reason why we have high prices is because the AMA, FDA, and insurance companies all engage in a massive orgy. Socialized medicine isn't going to fix that. Yea, the medical industry sucks ass, but socialism never works out well for anyone but a select few. I had a routine 47-minute surgery last year for a hernia, and with good insurance out-of-pocket expenses were still over $2200. Nonetheless, I think there is something to be said about proper eating, exercise, and well-being. Eat well and take care of yourself and most medical costs will be a non-entity.