50 Nonclinical Careers for Physicians: Fulfilling, Meaningful, and Lucrative Alternatives to Direct Patient Care

50 Nonclinical Careers for Physicians: Fulfilling, Meaningful, and Lucrative Alternatives to Direct Patient Care
Author: Sylvie Stacy
Publisher: American Association for Physician Leadership
Total Pages: 314
Release: 2020-05-20
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 9780984831074

How Physicians Can Leverage Their Clinical Skills to Transition to Another Career. By the time they realize their career in clinical medicine isn't everything they thought it would be, many physicians believe they're too invested in their trade to turn back now. Feeling burned out, disengaged, unfulfilled or burdened by high student debt or compensation incommensurate with the demands of their job, they may feel trapped, without options and with nowhere to turn. In her book, 50 NONCLINICAL CAREERS FOR PHYSICIANS: FULFILLING, MEANINGFUL, and LUCRATIVE ALTERNATIVES TO DIRECT PATIENT CARE, preventive medicine physician Sylvie Stacy offers physicians an escape from that bleak "trap" by identifying numerous nonclinical career options that could align with their skillsets and individual financial situation. While providing an escape from the stressors of clinical medicine, the book also allays much of the potential guilt associated with "selling out" their chosen profession or abandoning patients by explaining how each physician's training and talents directly translate to patient care outside of clinical medicine. The value of 50 NONCLINICAL CAREERS FOR PHYSICIANS is in its actionable advice, including how to market yourself in job applications and interviews, and the abundance of detail it provides - including responsibilities, range of compensation and stress levels - to help readers decide which alternative career is the best fit for them. And while other authors encourage physicians to start their own business, Stacy focuses on full-time positions that don't require the reader to begin their own consulting business or find their own clients.

Careers Beyond Clinical Medicine

Careers Beyond Clinical Medicine
Author: Heidi Moawad
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 185
Release: 2013
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0199860459

Doctors at any stage can use this book to clearly evaluate the issues involved when considering a career change. This book shows physicians how they can serve society and patients in innovative ways, and make a notable impact on health care delivery, policy and quality when they use their medical background in a non-traditional career pursuit. are explored and a step-by-step route with practical advice for finding the best career is described.

Family Therapy as an Alternative to Medication

Family Therapy as an Alternative to Medication
Author: Phoebe S. Prosky
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 346
Release: 2004-03-01
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1135953201

Family Therapy as an Alternative to Medication critically and passionately explores the concepts and practices that constitute the interface between family systems based psychotherapy and modern biological psychiatry. This diverse collection of essays, eight by psychiatrists, is neither for nor against medication, but takes a skeptical view of the unquestioned dominance that medication-based treatments have achieved among mental health practitioners. Its viewpoint is that therapeutic attention to context and relationships, regularly diminished when medications are prescribed, interferes with the development of psychiatric disorders, adds to maturity, and expands consciousness. Clinical examples, by both practitioners and patients, are used to define potential problems that arise from trying to combine a medical model with family systems work and also illustrate the decision-making processes and methods for applying family systems based therapies. This book will stimulate thoughtful conversation among students and practitioners of all mental health disciplines.

Diagnosis and Risk Management in Primary Care

Diagnosis and Risk Management in Primary Care
Author: Wilfrid Treasure
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 241
Release: 2017-10-02
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 1315346338

'Medical technology is beneficial for well researched dangerous diseases. However, most symptoms that people bring to their primary care physician have no single clearly identifiable cause: investigations and drugs do more harm than good - and also waste resources - ' - Wilfrid Treasure Diagnosis and Risk Management in Primary Care teaches that adopting an evidence-based approach to primary care improves patient care and treatment outcomes. It demonstrates that brief clinical assessments, repeated if necessary, allow effective diagnosis while avoiding the costs and complications associated with more advanced testing. Adopting a fresh approach, this book sets consultation skills alongside evidence-based information by both itemising the specific techniques and facts that are needed in the consulting room, and providing detailed information on odds and likelihood ratios to quantify risk and deal with uncertainty. This book provides food for thought, and helps doctors develop communication skills that support their personal styles of consulting, encouraging a more traditional, intuitive treatment. It provides a map of the consultation and a compass to navigate through symptoms, signs and evidence - listening to their patients with one ear and, with the other, to the reflective inner voice of reason. General Practitioner Specialist Trainees and their teachers will find much of interest, as will established General Practitioners with an interest in maintaining traditional models of care. Undergraduate medical students and candidates for the MRCGP will find this an ideal reader for the clinical skills assessment. 'What a breath of fresh air to find an author capable of putting the patient back at the centre of the consultation and who is able to entertain at the same time as he informs and to stimulate critical reflection while nudging us in the direction of a rigorous approach to diagnosis, and the assessment and communication of risk.' From the foreword by Roger Jones

The Physician's Guide to Avoiding Financial Blunders

The Physician's Guide to Avoiding Financial Blunders
Author: Kenneth W. Rudzinski
Publisher: SLACK Incorporated
Total Pages: 201
Release: 2010
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1556428758

When was the last time you checked under the hood of your financial plan for life? From this very first question, author Kenneth W. Rudzinski draws you into an action-oriented examination of your complete financial plan, including retirement, investment, estate, asset protection, risk management, and more. The Physician's Guide to Avoiding Financial Blunders expands on Kenneth W. Rudzinski's popular financial and practice management column featured in world-renowned newspapers on ophthalmology, orthopedics, optometry, cardiology and infectious disease. Author Kenneth W. Rudzinski brings his thirty-five years of business and practice management experience directly to you in The Physician's Guide to Avoiding Financial Blunders. This is a dynamic book that provides practicing physicians at various stages of their careers and with varying personal financial means with the tips and tools to avoid the financial disasters that await most people who fail to check the details of their financial plan for life. Organized in a comprehensive and user-friendly format, physicians will embrace and appreciate the information being presented chapter by chapter in an effective point-by-point action plan that will advise "what to do vs what not do" in their personal and professional planning. Some topics covered include: - Investing - common sense lessons on how to avoid the "big mistake" in investing - Retirement - your "timeline" to prepare for the longest "vacation" of your life? - Risk management - avoid the income disaster headed your way? - Asset protection - learn how to defeat predators and creditors before they defeat you - Estate planning - your estate documents may already be extinct - Financial planning - 10 common mistakes--which ones are you making? Appealing to a wide audience, young and old, with a conversational tone and with dozens of humorous anecdotes, all physicians will benefit from reading and applying the tips and advice presented inside The Physician's Guide to Avoiding Financial Blunders. You cannot read this book without finding something in your financial plan for life that needs immediate fixing. The impact is immediate. Be prepared to be challenged to action.

Student Guide to Primary Care

Student Guide to Primary Care
Author: David Jay Steele
Publisher:
Total Pages: 420
Release: 2003
Genre: Medical
ISBN:

This book is a "just-in-time" resource for medical students, physician assistant students, and nurse practitioner students who are in the early stages of their clinical training and just beginning to see patients in the ambulatory setting. The book addresses common medical problems in adults and children (e.g., sore throat, back pain, headache, otitis media, hypertension, diabetes) and it also provides concise material on common office diagnostic procedures. Each chapter opens with a brief synopsis and then provides basic information on differential diagnosis, appropriate physical exam, lab tests to consider, and treatment options. Reader-friendly format with generous use of callouts Each callout category (definitions, red flags, "brain," referrals, treatment) is accompanied by an identifying icon to assist in quick retrieval of information while interacting or preparing to interact with a patient Bulleted lists, mnemonics, illustrations, and tables enhance readability Practical and useful reference for family medicine, general internal medicine, or general pediatric practices

Food Is Better Medicine Than Drugs

Food Is Better Medicine Than Drugs
Author: Patrick Holford
Publisher: Piatkus
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2011-02-17
Genre: Health & Fitness
ISBN: 0748125132

FOOD IS BETTER MEDICINE THAN DRUGS is an important and potentially controversial book from top nutritionist Patrick Holford and leading health journalist Jerome Burne. Brilliantly researched and based on solid scientific trials and illuminating case histories, Food is Better Medicine than Drugs will revolutionise the way you think about your health and put you back in charge. The authors reveal how modern medicine has become distorted and is now, for reasons largely to do with profit and power, heavily dependent on prescription drugs. They look at common health problems (pain/arthritis, heart, depression, diabetes, memory, hormones, digestion, breathing, infections etc) and compare the effectiveness of nutrition-based approaches with today's potentially harmful commonly used medicines.

The Locum Life: A Physician’s Guide to Locum Tenens

The Locum Life: A Physician’s Guide to Locum Tenens
Author: Andrew N. Wilner, MD
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2018-12-28
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1483494667

The Locum Life: A PhysicianÕs Guide to Locum Tenens, is an insiderÕs guide to locum tenens, the world of temporary physician positions. In 20 clearly written chapters, the author articulates the nuts and bolts of The Locum Life. Physicians will learn how to find their first locum tenens assignment, run their own business, travel, and achieve the work/life balance of their dreams.

Do You Feel Like You Wasted All That Training?

Do You Feel Like You Wasted All That Training?
Author: Michael J. McLaughlin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 182
Release: 2014-05
Genre:
ISBN: 9780615167947

The candid combination of personal experience and doctor-to-doctor advice in this book helps readers interested in non-clinical careers for physicians navigate the five phases of their physician career change: introspection, exploration, preparation, acquisition, and transition. JUST A FEW OF THE 60+ QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS BOOK: 1. How did you decide what you wanted to do? 2. What are my options outside of clinical practice? 3. What medical specialties are in highest demand? 4. What types of resources are available to explore non-clinical options? 5. What job titles are the ones for physicians? 6. How much money can a physician make in a non-clinical job? 7. How did you network? 8. What questions did you ask during a networking call? 9. What skills transfer well to a non-clinical job? 10. How can I "beef up" my resume? 11. Should I get an MBA? 12. Is geography and willingness to relocate an issue? 13. What should I emphasize in an introductory letter? 14. What should I emphasize in my resume/CV? 15. What do you look for when interviewing an applicant? 16. How did you know that you were making the right decision? 17. How did your family react? 18. How did your colleagues react? 19. Did you have to take a pay cut? 20. How did you know you were choosing the right job? 21. In what ways do physicians struggle after transitioning? 22. What have been the biggest surprises since your career transition? 23. Looking back on the transition, what would you do differently now? 24. What advice do you have for physicians considering a career transition? 25. Do you feel like you wasted all that training? Please also visit Physician Renaissance Network at PRNresource.com for comprehensive information about non-clinical careers for physicians, physician career change, physician consulting, and physician entrepreneurism. FROM THE AUTHOR: In 2001 I did something deemed unthinkable by my peers; I left my plastic surgery practice to begin working in a non-clinical career, medical communications. At first I knew nothing about the large number of non-clinical careers for physicians, or where to find out about them. Most importantly, I did not know any non-clinical physicians working in these industries. Going through a physician career change was completely foreign territory Now, as co-owner of a medical communications company, I am exposed to various types of non-clinical careers for physicians and speak with many clinicians who are interested in their own physician career change. Although I once considered myself an anomaly, I now have a better sense of the growing number of physicians in non-clinical careers and the endless opportunities available. I wrote this book and speak about physician career change and non-clinical careers for physicians to help others avoid the obstacles I faced. BACK COVER: "Physicians are used to linear career paths, formalized educational programs, and textbooks. Our careers typically progress through a predictable series of decision points, each complete with a road map for the next several years and a bibliography of recommended reading. Stepping out of a clinical career path can open up an endless set of options with no road map - a seemingly daunting proposition for the physician mindset." EXCERPTS: "I felt stuck for so long, as though I had spent most of my life moving in the wrong direction. I was frustrated with myself. How could I become so trapped?" "Leaving clinical practice was like finally breaking the surface and emerging into the sunlight after holding my breath under water for years." "My career transition was liberating. For the first time since starting medical school, I was extremely excited about my future career path. Interestingly, medical communications would draw upon my knowledge from the past. Leaving clinical practice would not mean that my past efforts in medicine would be thrown away. I was not going to be "wasting all those years of training."