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Frequently Asked Questions
Q. What do surgeons do day in, day out? What is the job
description for surgeons? Where are the best practice opportunities?
The job description for surgeons varies depending on what environment
they are practicing in. Many surgeons find themselves in a multifaceted
career that allows them to put their skills to good use in a
combination of workplace settings. Although the workplace settings
may vary, one factor remains the same: the surgical profession
is one of responsibility and leadership. The surgeon is responsible
for the preoperative diagnosis of the patient, for performing
the operation, and for providing the patient with postoperative
surgical care and treatment. The surgeon is also looked upon
as the leader of the surgical team.
During the course of an operation, the surgeon must make important
decisions about the patient's health, safety, and welfare. Furthermore,
the surgeon must work to ensure cooperation among the other members
of the surgical team, which typically includes another surgeon
or qualified person who acts as the surgeon's assistant, the
anesthesiologist, and operating room nurses.
There are seven major settings in which a surgeon can put their
education, training, and skills to valuable use: private practice,
academic medicine, institutional practice, hospitals, ambulatory
surgery settings, government service programs, and the uniformed
services.
Private Practice
- Centers around patient care.
- Provides for more professional independence
- Allows freedom to decide the organization of the practice,
as well as the hours, the hospitals inwhich you practice, and
the type of patients that are attracted
- Tends to encourage long-term relationships with patients
- Requires business management skills and strong professional
relationships with referring physicians
- Includes responsibilities for providing his/her own employment
benefits
- Suits surgeons with a strong and enthusiastic interest in
patient care activities
- Provides the opportunity to perform ambulatory, or office-based,
surgeries
- Offers the option for managed care contracts
Academic Medicine
- Combines teaching, patient care, and medical research
- Places the surgeon in an environment that is known for being
in the forefront of scientific breakthroughs and for taking the
initiative in developing experimental therapies
- Focuses on research, thus, these hospitals attract patients
with diseases and disorders that are less likely to be found
in a traditional private or group practice
- Suits a surgeon who is interested in a broad exposure to
a diverse range of clinical cases
- Allows surgeons to become part of a research community, where
they are expected to conduct clinical investigations; often advancement
in this type of practice environment is linked to successful
research efforts
- Emphasizes teaching and providing leadership and guidance
to medical students and residents are vitally important
Institutional Practice
- Offers full-time practice that is directly affiliated with
a particular hospital or clinic
- Places emphasis exclusively on patient care; and offers the
option of combining patient care with research and educational
activities
- Establishes goals and a mission which should be carefully
considered and should match the surgeons career interests
- Creates an image that could have an impact on the surgeon's
practice, ie-internationally renowned institutions attract more
complicated and atypical cases than a private practice
- Offers an established practice with the necessary administrative
and business systems already in place
- Provides health care coverage, malpractice insurance, and
retirement savings programs
- Allows for a more flexible schedule depending on the number
of surgeons on staff who can provide coverage, but could created
restrictions on certain activities, such as scheduling vacation
time depending on availability of coverage
- Requires that surgeons abide by certain rules and regulations
set forth to make the group function as a whole
- Suits surgeons who welcome the opportunity to be on the cutting
edge of whatever is going on in the field
Hospitals
- Constitutes the central focus for most of the surgeons work,
in spite of the increase in ambulatory surgical care
- Surgeons spend more time working in the hospital than do
physicians on other specialties
- Provides a variety of career choices for surgeons due to
individual hospital diversity inculding: size; urban or rural;
government-sponsored or privately owned; specializing in certain
areas of medicine (ie-cancer treatment); only serving patients
of certain age groups (ie-children's hospitals)
- Offers a wide variety of choices for a hospital-based practice,
through exposure to different hospital environments during medical
school.
Ambulatory Surgery Settings
- Offers an increased opportunity to perform a number of operations.
These surgeries share a common feature: the patient arrives at
the facility, undergoes the surgical procedure, and returns home
to recover from the operation on the very same day
- Presents surgeons with the opportunity to ensure that their
patients receive continuity of care through reorienting their
practice
- Establishes a variety of settings in which ambulatory surgery
can be performed: the surgeon's office, an ambulatory surgery
department within a hospital, a hospital-sponsored ambulatory
surgery center in a separate location from the hospital, or an
ambulatory surgery center that is independently owned by a group
of surgeons in private practice
- Affects how often surgeons work based on the surgeon's specialty
and nature of the patients' illnesses
- Provides the opportunity to perform the growing number of
procedures that are now considered appropriate for an ambulatory
setting: hernia repair, cataract surgery, breast biopsy, and
laparoscopy
Government Service Programs
- Offers is a variety of practice opportunities available through
the federal government's Public
Health Service (PHS) which consists of eight governmental
agencies: National Institutes of Health; Food and Drug Administration;
Centers for Disease Control; Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental
Health Administration; Health Resources and Services Administration;
Agency for Health Care Policy and Research; Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry; and Indian Health Service
- Presents a variety of opportunities through each of these
agencies, which may vary according to a physician's medical specialty
- Offers an opportunity to treat patients who have limited
access to high-quality health care ie, those in prisons or on
Indian reservations
- Establishes an organized, uniformed-service fashion with
officers, promotions, and pay scales that are similar to those
used in other uniformed services
- Provides an opportunity to perform service in the US or with
the World Health Organization in under served areas around the
world
- Establishes a minimum tour of duty in the commissioned
corps, usually two years; however, certain positions are
available to students in their second year of health professional
training for a period of 31 to 120 days
- Offers diversity through assignments to different positions
and locations, much like an officer pursuing a military career.
The Uniformed Services
- Offers different ways in which physicians can pursue a military
career, through different branches of the uniformed servicesthe
Air Force, Navy, or Army
- Available to graduating doctors for a surgical residency
in the military, and to board certified surgeons to enlist and
pursue a military medical career
- Offers its own unique opportunities that differ by each individual
branch of the military: Air Force
medicine deals with flight-related disorders; Navy
physicians gain exclusive training and practice in the specialties
of underseas medicine and Navy flight surgeons undergo training
at the Naval Aerospace Medical Institute and fly with air crews;
the Army provides surgical
practice opportunities through its worldwide network of hospitals
and base facilities and its world-famous research institutes,
such as the Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington, DC
- Provides additional benefits including a commission in the
service, a guaranteed medical practice without having to incur
the cost of equipment, supplies, and malpractice insurance premiums,
subsidized housing and living expenses, assignments in different
parts of the US and abroad, free relocation services, guaranteed
paid annual leave, and generous retirement benefits after 20
years of service
- Offers surgeons who wish to maintain a full-time civilian
medical practice additional career opportunities that are available
to them through their local branch of the National Guard or another
branch of the military reserve
- Requires a time commitment of attending an annual two-week
medical training session, a monthly weekend drill session, and
any other additional service that may be deemed necessary by
a declaration for the deployment of the reserve armed forces
- Presents surgeons who serve in the military reserve, such
as commission as an officer, salary compensation based on grade
or rank, retirement benefits after 20 years of service, the opportunity
to attend medical military conferences, assistance for qualified
physicians in repaying guaranteed student loans, stipend programs
that grant payments to qualified physicians who are in certain
residency programs, and a stimulating perspective of medicine
apart from the daily civilian medical routine.
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by the American College of Surgeons, Chicago, IL 60611-3211
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