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DesertDrifter

11/07/11 4:25 PM

#34220 RE: GEO928 #34217

there would still be ample opportunity for the greedy ones to bob noses and put bags of saline solution into tits. Your bell curve would still have elective procedures and services for the 1% who have the money to pay for their vanity. Also, more visits for the average american would mean more preventive medicine could be practiced, lowering costs... i.e. giving a person blood pressure medication instead of them being afraid to go to the doctor and ending up with heart attacks and strokes to the tune of hundreds of thousands per.

Those doctors that want to actually help people could still make a great wage and it would take some of the "uncertainty" out of the business... the same thing the republican assholes say they need to re-invest in america... removal of uncertainty in taxation and regulation. You want it both ways again, eh?
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fuagf

11/07/11 6:10 PM

#34244 RE: GEO928 #34217

GEO, 86% of Australian doctors report high rates of job satisfaction - see why

More than 80% of Australian doctors are moderately or very satisfied with their jobs, a national survey has found.

The survey, of 10?498 doctors, 19% of those who were contacted and eligible, found that 86% were moderately or very satisfied with their jobs, with no significant differences between GPs, specialists, and specialists in training. Hospital non-specialists were less satisfied.

The predictors of high professional satisfaction included:

- a good support network
- a household with a high income
- patients with realistic expectations w
- being able to take time off
- being younger or close to retirement
- having good self reported health.

Female GPs earn an average 25% less than their male counterparts and that GPs on average earn 32% less than specialists. The average annual pretax personal earnings of GPs and specialists were $US 180?000 and $US 316?570, respectively.

With Australia in the throes of national health reform, the researchers said that their findings set an important baseline for examining the effects of policy changes on doctors’ job satisfaction.

The survey was conducted between June and November 2008, before the Australian government announced its national health reform agenda.

The survey findings were published in the 3 January edition of the Medical Journal of Australia.

a bit more .. twitter feeds and references .. http://casesblog.blogspot.com/2011/03/86-of-australian-doctors-report-high.html