logoSign In

Physician Career Resources Blog

View all posts
1
...
252627
...
48

The Best Cities in the Southwest for a Career in Healthcare

By Crystal Jones RN - September 27, 2018

The Southwest is a place of beauty and weather that could make you the envy of everyone. The biggest aspect to consider is that many of the large centers will have higher costs of living. Choosing one of these cities that also has a high number of healthcare jobs allows you to enjoy the Southwest life while also enjoying a vibrant healthcare career.

Read More
The Best Cities in the Southwest for a Career in Healthcare

Can Physicians Really Have It All? Work-life Balance in the Modern Era of Medicine

By Ore Ogunyemi, MD - September 18, 2018

Whether or not physician work-life balance is possible, it is highly coveted. Younger generations of doctors (those 35 years old and younger) and an increasingly female workforce have spearheaded this movement towards balance. Women make up about half of all medical students and residents and many - along with an increasing number of their male colleagues - value raising a family and pursuing other life interests. While older generations accepted that the calling to become a physician would limit other areas of life, and the medical profession overall has a poor record of self-care, times are changing, and this newer generation is looking for a change.

Read More
Can Physicians Really Have It All? Work-life Balance in the Modern Era of Medicine

Managing Patients with Big Shot Syndrome

By Faith A. Coleman, MD - September 13, 2018

Self-restraint is one of the most-practiced and valuable skills in my repertoire. I stood in the exam room with her, hands in the pockets of my white coat. I was expressionless and silent while she ranted. I did not, (almost-irresistibly) tell her that this was not the behavior of a woman who was ready for motherhood.

Read More
Managing Patients with Big Shot Syndrome

Trick Question: What’s the Answer to Drug Abuse?

By Gerard DiLeo, MD - September 11, 2018

From thousands of years ago to now, we harvested the opium poppy and eventually the morphine molecule to give the LC some competition. The LC tones down the pain signals initiated by injury, but narcotics, when they fill the opioid receptor site's on neurons, block the pain signals from registering at the brain level, and the LC’s response doesn’t even happen.

Read More
Trick Question: What is the Answer to Drug Abuse?

Best Cities in the Southeast for a Career in Healthcare

By Crystal Jones RN - September 6, 2018

Are you interested in diving into some Southern charm and hospitality? Look at the cities listed here, and you might find that dream healthcare job that allows you to love both the place you live and your career.

Read More
Louisville, KY

Tales from the Trenches - A Late Night in the ED

By Mitchel Schwindt, MD - August 30, 2018

Tonight began like any other night. I sleepily entered the back door near the trauma bay and was greeted by a man sprinting down the hallway wearing one shoe, tighty-whities, and sporting handcuffs attached to one wrist.

Read More
Tales from the Trenches - A Late Night in the ED

Preparing Your Medical Practice for a Disaster

By Faith A. Coleman, MD - August 28, 2018

The year 2017 is remembered in infamy for its disasters: hurricanes, wildfires, blizzards, floods, heat waves, tornados, mudslides, mass shootings, school violence, terrorism, and more. What are the roles of physicians and their practices in disasters? What are their obligations? If a natural or man-made disaster shut down your office and wiped out your office records, would you know how to piece your practice back together and quickly start seeing patients again?

Read More
Preparing Your Medical Practice for a Disaster

Changing Times and Changing Minds – A Post for Future Physicians

By Gerard DiLeo, MD - August 21, 2018

In my dad’s time, I know he did hysterectomies, appendectomies, vein stripping, colon surgery, proctology, and many other things that just having his diploma and a knife qualified him for. True, it was a pretty good diploma as diplomas go, but today we know that you can’t know everything about everything.

Read More
John L. DeLio, MD, circa 1949

Why Is EHR Interoperability So Difficult?

By Faith A. Coleman, MD - August 16, 2018

The point of the blame game isn’t to persecute the players, but to understand the dynamics of interoperability issues, in order to create solutions. Of the stakeholders, only policymakers have a clear, strong interest in promoting interoperability. They should ensure that cross-vendor interoperability isn’t prohibitively costly for EHR vendors and providers. Once the business case for interoperability outweighs the business case against it, both vendors and providers can pursue it without great harm to their bottom lines.

Read More
Why Is EHR Interoperability So Difficult?

3 Ways Physicians Can Decompress and Rejuvenate During Time Off

By Miranda Belcher, RN - August 14, 2018

While there is not much that can be done to change the work day of a physician — how the provider copes with or responds to these stressful work conditions, can mean the difference between life and death. Maybe that is too extreme. However, what you do on your time off could determine whether you experience burnout or job satisfaction. Making the most of your days off can also contribute to the maintenance of mental stability and the avoidance of a nervous breakdown.

Read More
3 Ways Physicians Can Decompress and Rejuvenate During Time Off
1
...
252627
...
48