Wednesday, June 24, 2009



I’m extremely distracted by a conversation. I’m sitting at Panera, trying to read, and in an adjacent table, a former medical resident is getting information from an office administrator about her possible job.

All the talk is about numbers: salary, bonus, benefits. I think she is a family practice resident, although I don’t recognize her. She asks about the salary structure, about the “paying back” to the practice on the way to partnership, trying to maximize her salary. The administrator talks about knowing how things are at first, the pace of practice, how the confidence that a doctor straight out of school compares to one who has been in practice for years.

The practice has a Doctor Leadership Series, the administrator says, “we encourage our doctors to go to it. We spend the first half of the day talking about leadership, how do to become a medical leader. In the afternoon we bring top medical leaders from across the country, for example Dr. ... a Professor at Harvard who does a lecture in the afternoon....”

It reminds me of why I do what I do. This conversation gets me interested (it’s a recurring interest) into why I do pediatrics, and why I’m not interested in a higher paying specialty. I still could, although it would be a significant economic struggle for my family (although it already is). Maybe emergency medicine, or something like it. On the other hand, do I want to give away the time I get as a pediatrician, time I use for my family, and to write?

Again, more money would make life easier, but I suspect it would take away from what I truly value in life.

And that’s what it’s all about, right?

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