Feature

Residents are drowning in job offers – and debt


 

There may be such a thing as too much choice. Just ask a final-year resident.

Physician search firm Merritt Hawkins did – actually, they heard from 391 residents – and 64% said that they had been contacted too many times by recruiters.

“Physicians coming out of training are being recruited like blue-chip athletes,” Travis Singleton, executive vice president of Merritt Hawkins, said in a statement. “There are simply not enough new doctors to go around.”

Merritt Hawkins asked physicians in their final year of residency about career choices, practice plans, and finances. Most said that they would prefer to be employed by a hospital or group practice, and a majority want to practice in a community with a population of 250,000 or more. More than half of the residents owed over $150,000 in student loans, but there were considerable debt differences between U.S. and international medical graduates.

The specialty distribution of respondents was 50% primary care, 30% internal medicine subspecialty/other, 15% surgical, and 5% diagnostic. About three-quarters were U.S. graduates and one-quarter of the residents were international medical graduates in this latest survey in a series that has been conducted periodically since 1991.

The survey was conducted in April 2018.

Resident's reality infographic

Recommended Reading

Louisiana House passes 6-week abortion ban
Clinician Reviews
Pharmacist-prescribed hormonal contraception safe, effective
Clinician Reviews
Gender equity, sexual harassment in health care
Clinician Reviews
Tick-borne disease has become a national issue
Clinician Reviews
Analysis: Why Alexa’s bedside manner is bad for health care
Clinician Reviews
Medicaid expansion associated with lower cardiovascular mortality
Clinician Reviews
Having unmet social needs ups cardiovascular risk
Clinician Reviews
Judge bars contraceptive mandate from being enforced
Clinician Reviews
Illinois law expands abortion rights for women
Clinician Reviews
Vaping among teens increased significantly from 2017 to 2018
Clinician Reviews