The Gateway to Your Orthopaedic Career.
  Wednesday, 11 January 2006
  32 Replies
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I am married to a PGY-2 orthopod, and I would like to know about the light at the end of the tunnel.

Does it get a lot better? What fellowship training might set up the best possibility for having good hours? What kind of practice should we look for to get the best hours?

Seriously, schedule is the only thing I/we care about right now. I want my husband back, and his kids want their dad back. Money and job satisfaction are honestly really low right now.

Please, help. I have heard foot and ankle and hand might be good options. Hand without replants anyway. Are there a lot of places that don't do replants? What kind of hours are we seriously looking at in all the different specialties? Peds? Trauma? Hand? Foot and ankle? He has ruled out spine and joints. He thinks there might be too much marketing involved with sports.

Thanks in advance.
19 years ago
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#50677
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Well, I have my never ending "honey do" list that I have to attend to. I also do alot of boating (skiing, wakeboarding, airchairing) and fishing. As well as haul the kids around to various events. We also like to catch a lot of athletic events like home football and basketball games.
19 years ago
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#50676
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I have two full clinic days a week which keep me busy starting at 8 and usually home by 5 or 5]

With two clinic days, two OR days and one day off what do you do on the other two days of the week?
19 years ago
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#50675
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I practice in Iowa City which has around 100,000 in the local county. We have ten orthopods and two PAs in our practice. Most of my partners are generalists with subspecialty interests such as spine, total joints, and sports medicine. We have two hand surgeons included as well. We also have a physiatrist joining the group soon to handle non-operative back for us. In addition, a foot/ankle specialist will be joining us in January.

We work out of a single level II hospital with 200 beds. All major trauma goes directly to the University across town which makes our call lifestyle real nice.
19 years ago
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#50674
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That gives me hope! What type of city (small, large, north, south) do you practice in? Could you please decribe the practice you are in (number of orthopods, specialties, etc)? Thank you for all your advice so far.
19 years ago
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#50673
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I don't think my practice is a rarity. I think most students see the lifestyle of an academic orthopod which is usually busier due to being at a trauma center, having research and teaching commitments, etc....

Now having a full day off every week may be a rarity, but most of my private orthopod friends have a least a half day off a week.
19 years ago
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#50672
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How difficult is it to find practices that allow more time off? Your practice situation seems like a rarity.
19 years ago
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#50671
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The lifestyle is there for any subspecialty, although traumatologists tend to have the most disruption and unusual hours. It's just the ability to find a group that allows a reasonable clinic and case load and doesn't force you to work your butt off. Part of it will be driven by you. How much money do you really want to make? What's more important, a bigger pay check at the end of the week or being home for dinner at night with the family and watching your kids' games? So some docs out there choose to work their tail off while others enjoy their lives.
19 years ago
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#50670
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Family life will be determined by practice selection and not necessarily subspecialty. For example, I am a sports doc/arthroscopist. I have two full clinic days a week which keep me busy starting at 8 and usually home by 5 or 5]

So it is possible to have a sports practice and a decent life. Is this type of lifestyle possible with a spine practice?
20 years ago
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#50669
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I would like to re-emphasize what orthodoc said. It is more about your particular practice setup than your subspecialty. Many people think trauma has an inherently poor schedule/lifestyle. I know a trauma guy that is in private practice at a level one non-university hospital. He only does trauma, no scopes/joints/general. He takes 4 overnight calls a month and covers the ER M-F until 4pm. The majority of his cases are cases seen by others in the community while they are on call and refered to him the next morning. Emergent stuff is taken care of obviously (open fx, compartments, etc) but they have an agreement that he will take whatever they (about 12 other docs) want to refer to him, no questions asked. He has available OR times each day so he is not starting cases after 5pm usually. He rarely is in the hospital (when not on call) after 5 or 6. Basically the other people in the practice do not want to disrupt their clinics/elective cases during the day, so they are willing to basically do night triage and handle emergencies and dish of stuff than can wait so that their 5 ACL reconstructions are not cancelled the next day.

SO in my opinion its all about the setup you find.
20 years ago
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#50668
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my husband is a pgy-3. i am sure that some specialties are more demanding than others, but i have a feeling that my husband will always have a demanding schedule. i think that, unfortunately or fortunately - depending on what day you ask me - he is where he is because of his dedication to ortho. and no matter what specialty we end up in, i have a feeling there will be times that our family life is going to take a hit.
that said, i do think that life after residency has to be better. it does, doesn't it?
20 years ago
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#50667
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Family life will be determined by practice selection and not necessarily subspecialty. For example, I am a sports doc/arthroscopist. I have two full clinic days a week which keep me busy starting at 8 and usually home by 5 or 5:30. I operate two days a week and usually try to get out of the hospital around 3. I also have a day off every week. In addition, I practice out of a hospital that takes very little trauma. So my call days are usually benign. An occasional trip to the ER, an occasional evening case. But I only take call about 3 or 4 days a month and one weekend every other month.

Practice selection is key. If you are looking for a good lifestyle, you need to live close to where you work (so your not stuck in your car). You need to join a group that has one clinic location or very few and also only work out of one hospital. It also helps if the hospital has a very low trauma load.

This is one example of a typical week. Probably a much better lifestyle than some of my friends. So there is light at the end of the tunnel. The question will be if you can find a nice practice opportunity in a place you want to live.
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