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Doctor's Job Is More Than Listening To Patients

Doctor's Job Is More Than Listening To Patients


All at once a particular physician gave up his booming west coast medical office in exchange for a corporate position. His practice, though thriving, was too boring to suit him. He felt like all he was anymore was a doctor who listened and occasionally talked. He had enjoyed more complex aspects of the medical profession, such as obstetrics and surgery, but his group had to stop such treatments because of expensive malpractice insurance. The medical field is now dominated by the specialists and traditional general practitioners feel their position is largely redundant.

New positions such as those in companies that manufacture pharmaceuticals pay much more and don't carry the risk factors that push malpractice insurance through the roof. He is among the increasing ranks of doctors who have transitioned into the corporate realm. Growing tired with the annoying aspects of their job such as government interference, insurance costs, the fight for research grants and the academic politics, these doctors are growing in number. There was one city that was thrilled to hire them as they're want to make improvements to product safety and employee health. The majority are still employed in the medical realm, some in occupational health advisory roles, some in pharmaceutical research, though business has emerged has having more appeal for some than medicine does.

Doctors can make salaries that exceed what is possible in a private practice. When you combine company paid malpractice insurance, travel, paid time off for study and teaching and other perks, as well as a 9 to 5 work day, you have a deal that easily competes with private practice.


Although they represent less than two percent of the physician population in the United States, trade and professional groups estimate thousands of doctors are now employed in full-time corporate positions. You can also find many physicians who specialize in occupational therapy who have found their calling as overseers. In similar but part time positions are more than 10,000 other doctors. You will find these physicians working at insurance companies as claims consultants and medical underwriters, as well as in the pharmaceutical field.


For those who do work in corporate medicine, the job title many are seeking is that of chief medical director. With an existing private practice already in place, he accepted part time employment with a restaurant corporation, as it was offered to him and it provided an income stream. He found himself working at an incredible pace, often examining one food handler every minute or 60 every hour. Although he was reluctant to give up his practice, he would later become the medical director of two movie studios. He found with the medical director job, he could do much more with the patient care because they weren't worried about making the payment.

In the past a doctor working in the corporate realm was seen as somebody who failed at private practice. The company doctor was viewed as someone who treated already healthy people, doing no more than applying bandages and dispensing aspirin. However, a shift in opinion and regulations regarding occupational and product safety have rendered corporate doctors newly powerful and worthy of admiration. It is gratifying to be considered legitimate, jokes a telecommunications company medical director in New York.

Doctors at earlier stages of their careers are able to be as successful or even more so than they might be otherwise. Older physicians may have to sacrifice some of their net income but this can be worth it. The improvement in the overall quality of life outweighs any loss of net income they have have agreed to. At one time I was thought by my peers to be a fool for making the switch from private practice to occupational medicine. A particular physician believes that many doctors have grown jealous.

The potential for bigger salaries and better benefits make these jobs popular. A 78-year-old multi-millionaire, who never had a private practice, is possibly the most well-known corporate physician; setting an example for other doctors. He revamped his father's failing drug company while still in medical school and made his first million dollars. After he graduated from medical school he bought and set up a surplus army field hospital in the famine stricken Ural Mountain region of the Soviet Union. While there, he learned that food rather than drugs were most desperately needed, and worked to import grain which led to the establishment of a network that furthered his business enterprises in the future.
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