Employment of physicians and surgeons is expected to grow faster than the
average for all occupations. Job opportunities should be very good,
especially for physicians and surgeons willing to practice in
specialties—including family practice, internal medicine, and OB/GYN—or in
rural and low-income areas where there is a perceived shortage of medical
practitioners.Employment change. Employment of physicians
and surgeons is projected to grow 14 percent from 2006 to 2016,
faster than the average
for all occupations. Job growth will occur because of continued expansion of
health care related industries. The growing and aging population will drive
overall growth in the demand for physician services, as consumers continue
to demand high levels of care using the latest technologies, diagnostic
tests, and therapies.
Demand for physicians’ services is highly sensitive to changes in
consumer preferences, health care reimbursement policies, and legislation.
For example, if changes to health coverage result in consumers facing higher
out-of-pocket costs, they may demand fewer physician services. Patients
relying more on other health care providers—such as physician assistants,
nurse practitioners, optometrists, and nurse anesthetists—also may temper
demand for physician services. In addition, new technologies will increase
physician productivity. These technologies include electronic medical
records, test and prescription orders, billing, and scheduling.
Job prospects. Opportunities for individuals interested in
becoming physicians and surgeons are
expected to be very good.
In addition to job openings from employment growth, numerous openings will
result from the need to replace physicians and surgeons who retire over the
2006-16 decade.
Unlike their predecessors, newly trained physicians face radically
different choices of where and how to practice. New physicians are much less
likely to enter solo practice and more likely to take salaried jobs in group
medical practices, clinics, and health networks.
Reports of shortages in some specialties, such as general or family
practice, internal medicine, and OB/GYN, or in rural or low-income areas
should attract new entrants, encouraging schools to expand programs and
hospitals to increase available residency slots. However, because physician
training is so lengthy, employment change happens gradually. In the short
term, to meet increased demand, experienced physicians may work longer
hours, delay retirement, or take measures to increase productivity, such as
using more support staff to provide services. Opportunities should be
particularly good in rural and low-income areas, as some physicians find
these areas unattractive because of less control over work hours, isolation
from medical colleagues, or other reasons.
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor,
Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2008-09 Edition
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Physician Employment
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Physician Job Outlook
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