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re: 1 out of 4 bachelor degrees and nearly half of masters degrees have a negative ROI

Posted on 5/11/24 at 10:06 am to
Posted by Bigdawgb
Member since Oct 2023
945 posts
Posted on 5/11/24 at 10:06 am to
quote:

If you want to be a primary care provider, you might find yourself making less money than an NP in some specialties.


CRNA is the sweet spot, imo, as they get good money & tons of time off.

General pediatrics, rheumatology, and endocrinology are about the only fields where an NP/PA can make more than a doctor though, and that's only doctors well below median productivity. Most primary care docs, especially ones with a full patient load, are going to make $100-200k a year more than NPs.
This post was edited on 5/11/24 at 10:08 am
Posted by Colonel Flagg
Baton Rouge
Member since Apr 2010
22840 posts
Posted on 5/11/24 at 12:45 pm to
quote:

General pediatrics, rheumatology, and endocrinology are about the only fields where an NP/PA can make more than a doctor though, and that's only doctors well below median productivity. Most primary care docs, especially ones with a full patient load, are going to make $100-200k a year more than NPs.


Now the NP route has turned into a diploma mill. Nursing schools are cranking them out with no care about quality. All it does is lower the warning power and not raise the level of care.
This post was edited on 5/11/24 at 7:03 pm
Posted by wackatimesthree
Member since Oct 2019
4331 posts
Posted on 5/11/24 at 10:53 pm to
quote:

Most primary care docs, especially ones with a full patient load, are going to make $100-200k a year more than NPs.


Not in my area. But it does vary by region.
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