Why [Some] Doctors Won’t Ever Work for Uncle Sam

Understanding the Medical Career Path

[circa 2024]

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By Dr. David E. Marcinko MBA, MEd, CMP

By Eugene Schmuckler PhD, MBA, CTS

www.MedicalBusinessAdvisors.com

MEDICARE FOR ALL?

Who seeks or writes about, physician careers under a M-4-Uber scenario?

When you think about careers, how many adults are truly aware of their own interests, values, strengths and weaknesses during their teen years? As with much of human behavior, career choices actually go through a series of stages.

Psychologists have for years identified stages of human development.  Kohlberg discussed stages of moral development. In the 1970’s, Daniel Levinson published The Season’s of a Man’s Life, a project he undertook when he began to look inward and tried to understand his behaviors, values and attitudes to work. Discussions with his university colleagues indicated that what he was experiencing was not unique to him.

Traditional Career Routes

For many years the prevailing thought was that the correct way to function in the labor market was to gain employment with a company progressing through the years until such time as you were eligible to receive the “gold watch”, the symbol of retirement. If you entered a professional discipline such as medicine or law, you did that for the rest of your life.

Alternate Career Paths

Today there are still individuals who follow these traditional patterns but there are other career paths that may be taken.

The most traditional career route follows a linear path, one that most of you have rejected. This entails gaining employment in a large, bureaucratic organization with a tall pyramidal structure [command-control]. It involves a series of upward (hopefully) moves in the organization until the career limit is reached. As the individual progresses upward in the organization he or she may work in different functional departments such as marketing, finance, and production. Organizations having these paths seek employees who tend to be highly oriented toward success defined in organizational terms and exhibit “leadership” skills. In general, these people demonstrate a strong commitment to the workplace. A person with this type of orientation (Organizationalist) exhibits the following tendencies:

  1. A strong identification with the organization; seeking organization rewards and advancement that are important measures of success and organizational status.
  2. High morale and job satisfaction.
  3. A low tolerance for ambiguity about work goals and assignments.
  4. Identification with superiors, showing deference toward them, conforming and complying out of a desire to advance; maintains the chain of command and compliance, and views respect for authority as the way to succeed.
  5. Emphasis on organizational goals of efficiency and effectiveness, avoiding controversy and showing concern for threats to organizational success.

As many readers of the Medical Executive-Post are aware, you have followed the expert medical career path, building a career on the basis of personal competence, or the development of a profession (legal or accounting professionals). As you are so painfully aware, you invest heavily, personally and financially in acquiring a particular skill and then you spend the major portion of your life following that skill. Unlike the pyramidal structure of the linear path, career paths are found in organizations that tend to be relatively flat, have departments in which there is a functional emphasis, emphasize quality and reliability, and have reward systems containing a strong recognition component.

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Medical Professionals are Different

Medical professionals are folks who are job-centered – not organization centered – viewing the demands of the organization as a nuisance that they seek to avoid [THINK: Gregory House MD].

However, that avoidance is impossible since the healthcare professional must have an organization in which to work. This is even more prevalent in today’s era of managed health care and e-Health 2.0, than ever before. At work, professionals experience more role conflict and are more alienated. Medical professionals exhibit these four tendencies:

  1. An experience of occupational socialization that instills high standards of performance in the chosen field; highly ideological about work values.
  2. Sees organizational authority as non-rational when there is pressure to act in ways that are not professionally acceptable.
  3. Tends to feel that their skills are not fully utilized in organizations; self-esteem may be threatened when they do not have the opportunity to do those things for which they have been trained;
  4. Seeks recognition from other professionals outside the organization, and refuses to play the organizational status game except as it reflects their worth relative to others in the organization. Professionals are very concerned with personal achievement and doing well in their chosen field. Organizational rewards serve to reflect the professional’s importance relative to others in the system. This recognition may be extremely fulfilling, especially when he or she is accorded higher status and pay than others. In the absence of organizational rewards the professional may use material objects (large homes, expensive cars) as a way of reflecting status and accomplishment.

Performance not Authority

Medical professionals are of the opinion that successful performance, not compliance with authority, is more reinforcing. With this mindset it is not surprising why many medical practitioners balk at working in the managed health care, state-run or governmental lead healthcare environment. Many professionally oriented people come from the middle class and have become successful through a higher level of education or by other efforts to acquire competence.

The Spiral Career Path

Those on the spiral career path make periodic moves from one occupation to another. Individuals who follow this career path tend to have high personal growth motives and are relatively creative. Usually these changes come after you have developed competence in the occupation you are working in and you think it is time to change what you do. The ideal spiral career path is to move from one occupation to an area related to it. This enables you to use some of the basic knowledge that you developed in your past work and to transfer it to your new occupation. The difference between this path and the linear path discussed above is that in this case the mobility pattern is lateral, not upward.

The Transitory Career Path

People who take the transitory career path cannot seem to, and perhaps do not want to settle down. The pattern is one of consistent inconsistency in their work. These are individuals who may find a great deal of satisfaction working as healthcare consultants. The work style is marked by an ability to do many things reasonably well. They value independence and variety, and they work best in relatively loose and unstructured organizations that tolerate the type of freedom they demand in their work.

Sam (1)

The Indifferents          

We have so far discussed the four types of career paths and two career orientations. A final form of career orientation is that of the indifferents, those who simply work for a paycheck. Will this be the result of Obama care? These are individuals who do their work well, but they are not highly committed to their job or the organization. Some characteristics of indifferents are:

  1. More oriented toward leisure, not the work ethic (is it Friday yet?); separates work from more meaningful aspects of life, and seeks higher-order need satisfaction outside the work organization.
  2. Tends to be alienated from work and not committed to the organization.
  3. Rejects status symbols in organizations.
  4. Withdraws psychologically from work and organizations when possible.

Assessment

Indifferents are not necessarily born that way; some are actually a product of their work experiences. People who once had an organizational orientation and were highly loyal may no longer follow orders without question.

For example, you may have had a medical officer manager who very early in his or her career was extremely committed to you and your medical practice, hospital or healthcare organization. He or she may seek rewards and want to advance. However, in later career life, after having been passed over several times for promotion, the person seeks rewards elsewhere. Thus, it is possible that through office practices, your healthcare organization may turn highly committed organizationalists (or medical professionals) into relative indifferents; HMO patsies or grunts for Uncle Sam.

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, be sure to subscribe. It is fast, free and secure.

Note: Dr. Gene Schmuckler is director of behavioral economics. He is an expert on physician career re-engineering, and a retired Professor of Organizational Behavior who taught Dr. Marcinko [our Publisher-in-Chief] in business school, a decade ago.

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko and Dr. Schmuckler are available for seminar or speaking engagements .Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

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Brousseau, K.R., Driver, M.J., Eneroth, K. and Larson, R.: Career Pandemonium: Realigning organizations and individuals. Academy of Management Executive 10 (4), 52-66. 1996

Presthus, R. The Organizational Society. New York, NY: St. Martin’s Press.

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Healthcare Career Positions With The Highest Demand

By Staff Reporters

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AKASA: Healthcare Positions With The Highest Demand

 •  Registrars: 59.6%
 •  Billing specialists: 54.7%
 •  Follow-up: 42.4%
 •  Front staff: 38.7%
 •  Central scheduling: 37.8%
 •  Denial specialists: 37.1%
 •  Authorization staff: 36.1%
 •  Claims specialists: 35.2%
 •  Collections: 34.4%
 •  Financial counselors: 26.9%
 •  Cash posters: 25.2%
 •  Underpayments: 17.8%
 •  Patient advocates: 11.7%
 •  Pre-filing: 7.7%

Source: AKASA Via PR Newswire, March 17, 2022

CITE: https://www.r2library.com/Resource/Title/082610254

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Re-Thinking the Medical Career Choice?

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Would You Do it All Over Again?

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Conclusion

Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

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Anatomy of a Doctor

Risks versus Rewards [A Changing Calculus]

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Some laymen enjoy helping others, but don’t seriously consider medical school. Hard work does pay off, but only if you’re good at biology in this case. One problem has always been the crazy amount of names to learn.

The thought of SAT exams, medical school and MCAT tests already raise stress levels. It’s no surprise that a large percent of doctors feel stressed. Today, only half of them recommend their career to others. It seemed like a fun career once all the classes and training was done. And, many doctors seemed to be happy by the way they carried themselves.

Not so today! The higher than average salaries probably helped to boost their attitude before the ACA. But, perhaps not so much, today!

So; not everyone is cut out to be a doctor. Although it sounds really cool and we can dream about it as a child, becoming a doctor is not always practical. It is a high-intensity job but with decreasing stature and pay, likely going forward.

Assessment

But, the joys of helping others and saving lives are always worth it; aren’t they?

Conclusion 

And so, your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Please review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.

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Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com

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Consultants and Hospital Employment Statistics

Economic Conditions Better than Other Major Industries

By Staff Reporters

horizontal-nurses1According to Richard Pizzi, on March 9th, Healthcare Finance Newsweek reported that employment at US hospitals climbed 0.14 percent in February to a seasonally adjusted 4,719,300 people.

Bureau of Labor Statistics

Responding to just issued BLS data, the number employed was 6,800 more than in January and 131,800 more than in February 2008. Without seasonal adjustments, which remove the effects of fluctuations due to seasonal events, hospitals employed 4,703,700 people in February 2009, 2,200 more than in January and 130,100 more than a year ago.

Impact on Healthcare Consultants

This was good news for financial advisors, insurance agents and accountants; medical management consultants and health economists; HIT suppliers and related DME vendors, etc.

Assessment

The news was not so good in other areas of the American economy, however, as the national unemployment rate rose from 7.6 percent to 8.1 percent. The US economy shed an additional 651,000 jobs in February 2009. But, according to Rachel Pentin-Maki; RN, MHA of www.MedicalBusinessAdvisors.com

“Employment continues to be strong in almost all aspects of the healthcare industrial complex. This includes professionals, technicians, nurses and para-professionals, as well. However, in the long-term, we believe that medicine will not attract the best and brightest young minds in the future. The economic, political and competitive demographics are just not favorable.” 

Conclusion

And so, your thoughts and comments on this Medical Executive-Post are appreciated. Is healthcare really a recession proof industry? What about those bright young minds; where will they go for professional careers, instead?

Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com  or Bio: www.stpub.com/pubs/authors/MARCINKO.htm

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