|
|
|
|
|
by arcanus
593 days ago
|
|
To first order, if doctors work fewer hours, more doctors will be required to serve the aggregate medical demand. More doctors working on the same amount of medical demand will be an increased supply of doctors, and so will reduce doctors salaries. This seems like an ideal outcome for consumers, and I suspect the AMA would lobby against this. But American doctors should also be aware that their famously world class compensation might be reduced with this tradeoff. |
|
My housemate is a nurse specializing in ECMO. In the time I've known him, his salary and benefits have been reduced twice. He'd note at his last job how many people were leaving because the scheduling makes it impossible to take time off and the benefits were paltry and getting worse. Three separate people needed to approve his time off requests for PTO he'd earned.
I would bet good money the same thing would happen in medicine. Pay people what they're worth and give them workable hours and lots of folks who are qualified (or easily recertified) for the positions will come out of the woodwork.