Thursday, January 25, 2007

A comparison of the educational costs and incomes of physicians and other professionals. [Entrez PubMed]

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N Engl J Med. 1994 May 5;330(18):1280-6.
Comment in:
N Engl J Med. 1994 May 5;330(18):1311-2.
A comparison of the educational costs and incomes of physicians and other professionals.
Weeks WB,
Wallace AE,
Wallace MM,
Welch HG.
Veterans Affairs Outcomes Group, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, White River Junction, VT 05009.
BACKGROUND. Efforts at physician-payment reform in the United States have focused largely on the relative incomes of primary care physicians and specialists, who more often have procedure-based practices. Comparisons of the incomes of physicians and other professional groups have received less attention. METHODS. We used standard financial techniques to determine the return on educational investment over a working lifetime for five groups of professionals: primary care physicians, specialist physicians, dentists, attorneys, and graduates of business schools. RESULTS. In current dollars, the difference in the average future hourly income between a given professional and a high-school graduate of the same age, after educational expenses are subtracted (average hours-adjusted net present value of the educational investment) was greatest for specialist physicians and attorneys; dentists and businesspeople had intermediate values; and primary care physicians had the lowest value. The annual yield on the educational investment over a working life (hours-adjusted internal rate of return) was 15.9 percent for primary care physicians, as compared with 29.0 percent for businesspeople, 25.4 percent for attorneys, 20.9 percent for specialist physicians, and 20.7 percent for dentists. A sensitivity analysis showed that primary care physicians did less well in terms of the return on investment than the other groups even when we varied the assumptions in our model widely and that specialist physicians did less well than attorneys working in law firms and dental specialists. CONCLUSIONS. Students can expect a poorer financial return on their educational investment when they choose a career in primary care medicine than when they choose a procedure-based medical or surgical specialty, business, the law, or dentistry.
PMID: 8145784 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE

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