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Vendaval -> "The Rise of the Midlevel Professional" (6/19/2007 1:06:38 PM)

"The Rise of the Midlevel Professional"
 
by Marshall Loeb
Friday, June 15, 2007

 
Why some people choose the lower pay of a midlevel career

" When my wife slipped on some angry ice and cracked her wrist last winter, she dutifully rushed to a hospital emergency room for repair. Surprisingly for us, the repair person was not a big-time, lavishly paid medical doctor, but a well-skilled though somewhat more modestly rewarded "physician assistant."

He had earned a university-awarded certificate qualifying him to set fractures, administer injections, read X-rays and perform many other challenging medical tasks associated with her ten weeks' treatment -- without a doctor.

Physician assistants constitute a rapidly expanding category of professional that is like a warrant officer in the armed forces -- somewhere between an enlisted man and an officer. The Bureau of Labor Statistics says that physician assistants are the fourth fastest-growing profession in the country.

More than that, physician assistants embody a major trend in job markets throughout the nation. Not only in medicine but in many other fields as well, people are finding alternatives to the daunting demands of traditional white-collar professions.

They are going into fields that require less paperwork and shorter hours than the 60 per week that have become the norm in many fields. Small wonder then that talented people are choosing to become paralegals instead of lawyers, electricians instead of electrical engineers, bookkeepers instead of accountants, opticians instead of ophthalmologists.

Choosing less stress -- and less pay

Here are some typical cases:

Anthony Fresquez, 46, of San Francisco, says that as a kid, "I just loved to draw and sketch, and my goal was to become an architect, but there were financial reasons that I did not go to university. My family did not stress education, and I wasn't prepared to go into significant debt."

So he attended the Denver Institute of Technology for two years and earned an associate's degree in architectural drafting. Today, he manages twelve people and earns just under $100,000 a year as a computer-aided design (CAD) draftsman at a large engineering firm. He could get somewhat more authority -- and money -- if he went back to college and became an architect, but that would require more work, more investment, and longer hours on the job for only marginal gains, and he has no desire to do that.

Leo Caamano, 32, of Port Chester, N.Y., wanted to be a doctor, but figured that he could never raise the hundreds of thousands of dollars needed for a medical degree. He also worried about malpractice suits and the high cost of malpractice insurance that doctors increasingly confront.

Instead of spending eight or more years studying to become a doctor, he spent four years at university and another two-and-a-half years in a hospital-based certification program for physician assistants. That certification enables him to do many of the things a medical doctor can do, short of, say, brain surgery. He can make diagnoses, prescribe medicines, order and interpret tests, conduct physical exams, and refer patients to specialists.

Says Caamano: "If I can do everything a doctor does, notably taking care of people, why not?" He earns $75,000 a year versus the $140,000 to $160,000 made by young doctors practicing family medicine in New York.

Some day, people like them may go back to college and pick up the roughly two to four years of additional class work needed to become a doctor or lawyer.

But, Fresquez said, "In my experience, people in this field don't want to invest the time and energy to go back to school."

More likely, many of them will focus on professions where the pay may be somewhat less but so is the stress.

He had earned a university-awarded certificate qualifying him to set fractures, administer injections, read X-rays and perform many other challenging medical tasks associated with her ten weeks' treatment -- without a doctor.

Physician assistants constitute a rapidly expanding category of professional that is like a warrant officer in the armed forces -- somewhere between an enlisted man and an officer. The Bureau of Labor Statistics says that physician assistants are the fourth fastest-growing profession in the country.

More than that, physician assistants embody a major trend in job markets throughout the nation. Not only in medicine but in many other fields as well, people are finding alternatives to the daunting demands of traditional white-collar professions.

They are going into fields that require less paperwork and shorter hours than the 60 per week that have become the norm in many fields. Small wonder then that talented people are choosing to become paralegals instead of lawyers, electricians instead of electrical engineers, bookkeepers instead of accountants, opticians instead of ophthalmologists.

Choosing less stress -- and less pay

Here are some typical cases:

Anthony Fresquez, 46, of San Francisco, says that as a kid, "I just loved to draw and sketch, and my goal was to become an architect, but there were financial reasons that I did not go to university. My family did not stress education, and I wasn't prepared to go into significant debt."

So he attended the Denver Institute of Technology for two years and earned an associate's degree in architectural drafting. Today, he manages twelve people and earns just under $100,000 a year as a computer-aided design (CAD) draftsman at a large engineering firm. He could get somewhat more authority -- and money -- if he went back to college and became an architect, but that would require more work, more investment, and longer hours on the job for only marginal gains, and he has no desire to do that.

Leo Caamano, 32, of Port Chester, N.Y., wanted to be a doctor, but figured that he could never raise the hundreds of thousands of dollars needed for a medical degree. He also worried about malpractice suits and the high cost of malpractice insurance that doctors increasingly confront.

Instead of spending eight or more years studying to become a doctor, he spent four years at university and another two-and-a-half years in a hospital-based certification program for physician assistants. That certification enables him to do many of the things a medical doctor can do, short of, say, brain surgery. He can make diagnoses, prescribe medicines, order and interpret tests, conduct physical exams, and refer patients to specialists.

Says Caamano: "If I can do everything a doctor does, notably taking care of people, why not?" He earns $75,000 a year versus the $140,000 to $160,000 made by young doctors practicing family medicine in New York.

Some day, people like them may go back to college and pick up the roughly two to four years of additional class work needed to become a doctor or lawyer.

But, Fresquez said, "In my experience, people in this field don't want to invest the time and energy to go back to school."

More likely, many of them will focus on professions where the pay may be somewhat less but so is the stress. "

http://finance.yahoo.com/career-work/article/103122/The-Rise-of-the-Midlevel-Professional




NakedOnMyChain -> RE: "The Rise of the Midlevel Professional" (6/19/2007 1:25:23 PM)

Interesting.  It honestly doesn't surprise me, though.  Having witnessed my father, grandfather and father-in-law all go through the high demands of varying white-collar professions, I can say that the stress isn't worth the money.  Especially with my father I've noticed the long hours and constant travel take their toll on him.  It's even hard for him to relax when he's supposed to be relaxing.

If it ever came down to a balance of money and family/free time, I would take the lower paying job to put more quality in my life.  After all, people work to provide necessities for themselves and their families.  They work at better jobs or longer hours to provide niceties.  But what's the point if they're not around to enjoy the niceties, or more importantly, the family they provide for?




popeye1250 -> RE: "The Rise of the Midlevel Professional" (6/19/2007 1:35:21 PM)

I always thought people went to college/university so that they (wouldn't) have to work 60-80 hours a week.




NakedOnMyChain -> RE: "The Rise of the Midlevel Professional" (6/19/2007 1:43:09 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: popeye1250

I always thought people went to college/university so that they (wouldn't) have to work 60-80 hours a week.


Ha!




philosophy -> RE: "The Rise of the Midlevel Professional" (6/19/2007 1:48:22 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: popeye1250

I always thought people went to college/university so that they (wouldn't) have to work 60-80 hours a week.


..think you have a slightly odd view of what a degree gets you there Popeye......




popeye1250 -> RE: "The Rise of the Midlevel Professional" (6/19/2007 2:05:30 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: philosophy

quote:

ORIGINAL: popeye1250

I always thought people went to college/university so that they (wouldn't) have to work 60-80 hours a week.


..think you have a slightly odd view of what a degree gets you there Popeye......


Well, growing up in the 50's and 60's that's what we were told.
It was different in those days.
I got a degree in Bus. Admin. that did no good at all.
In the interview for the job I got the lady said, "that's nice" when I told her I had a degree in business.
But, she wanted to talk at length about my years in the U.S. Coast Guard. Where did I go, what I did etc. So, I don't really expect a degree to "get" me much. Especially these days when everyone and his brother, sister and dog has one.
You don't even have to go to school anymore, you can get a degree online at dozens of schools now.
I know a Nurse Practitioner who's getting her Doctorate in Nursing online.




philosophy -> RE: "The Rise of the Midlevel Professional" (6/19/2007 2:06:19 PM)

...i keep reading the thread title as 'the rise of the medieval professor' and had visions of bespectacled academics with leather patches on the elbows of their full plate armour.......




philosophy -> RE: "The Rise of the Midlevel Professional" (6/19/2007 2:08:12 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: popeye1250

Well, growing up in the 50's and 60's that's what we were told.
It was different in those days.


...couldn't agree more......nowadays a degree isn't worthless, but it doesn't carry the cachet it once did.....




popeye1250 -> RE: "The Rise of the Midlevel Professional" (6/19/2007 2:19:56 PM)

Ladies, I'm looking for a job.
Do you have any openings I could fill?




Sinergy -> RE: "The Rise of the Midlevel Professional" (6/19/2007 2:40:33 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: popeye1250

I always thought people went to college/university so that they (wouldn't) have to work 60-80 hours a week.


An attorney working to make partner in a law firm has to bill some standard number of hours which is 40 and higher.

In order to bill that number of hours, they frequently have to work 2-3 hours for every billable hour.

This is after going all the way to law school and passing the bar.

On the other hand, a paralegal, depending on training, can do everything an attorney can with the exception of representing a client in a court of law.

There are certain things a degree tends to be a requirement for, although those seem to be going away.

Sinergy




seeksfemslave -> RE: "The Rise of the Midlevel Professional" (6/19/2007 3:36:18 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: popeye1250
I always thought people went to college/university so that they (wouldn't) have to work 60-80 hours a week.


Exactly, but when they graduate and find out how useless their academic qualifications are they get a big big shock. Have they been conned  or are they better human beings ?




NakedOnMyChain -> RE: "The Rise of the Midlevel Professional" (6/19/2007 5:43:40 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: philosophy

...i keep reading the thread title as 'the rise of the medieval professor' and had visions of bespectacled academics with leather patches on the elbows of their full plate armour.......


Ditto!

Edited to add:  But I get a vision of Archimedes from the animated "Sword and the Stone".




slaveboyforyou -> RE: "The Rise of the Midlevel Professional" (6/19/2007 6:01:23 PM)

I got a degree in history after changing majors 3 times.  I was just having so much fun going to school, that I didn't want to leave.  A liberal arts degree is more in tune with a classical education, but it doesn't garner the respect it used to.  I had some interest in going to graduate school, but I didn't really want the headache of the debt I would incur.  The degree helps a little, but it's never going to make me a lot of money.  I am not sorry that I went though, I enjoyed the experience.  I do think education broadens your horizens and gives you different perspective on the world.  I am certainly doing okay, so I am not complaining.  I definitely will take less stress over money.  Money is nice, but what good is it if you don't have time to enjoy it?  




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