Love the videos man! Starting my first job in Trauma Surgery/General Surgery this month. So excited, but also very nervous and your videos keep me motivated to get out there, learn, and WORK. Thanks!
You’re my favorite PA youtuber, you give very valuable information towards financial freedom for us. I am Pre-PA, thank you for all your hardwork!! Keep doing what you do, you should have many more subscribers!
If working 5 hours in an internal medicine private practice patient care outpatient hours twice a week, should I expect to be paid for the before and after clinic hours I put in doing chart prep and review calling patients. I do not have paid malpractice insurance, life insurance, 401k, health insurance, etc. My "5 hour" days actually end up being about 7 hour days sometimes longer. I am on Cape Cod, MA. Any solid info will be appreciated. Thanks. M. Gilman PA-C for 24 years.
I've seen some employers not compensate for charting which is done once the day is over "seeing patients" which then forces you to take some work home with you. This is effectively wage theft as you are performing job tasks but not being paid for it. I would go to them and say that you're spending at least an extra hour doing callbacks / reviewing imaging / charting after your 5-hour shifts. You'll need 1 hour of "admin time" at the end (or beginning of the day) to call patients and chart appropriately for both billing purposes and from a medicolegal standpoint. If they want to pay you a slightly lower rate for doing admin work, so be it. I hope this helps.
Hello! I was wondering if you know anything about direct entry PA programs? I am a junior in high school and I was wondering what can I do now to maximize my chances of getting into a direct entry program.
I just applied to accelerated programs and I’d recommend shadowing and getting your cna license or some type of volunteer experience in a hospital. You should also apply early because the spots fill up extremely fast.
Video of own per diem gig is earning $190/hour in the ER - ruclips.net/video/S9I2wc23HTU/видео.html
thanks for sharing! once I’m a PA, I hope to work one PRN job and one FT job. Also would love if you made a video about Locum Tenens :) thanks!!
Love the videos man! Starting my first job in Trauma Surgery/General Surgery this month. So excited, but also very nervous and your videos keep me motivated to get out there, learn, and WORK.
Thanks!
You’re my favorite PA youtuber, you give very valuable information towards financial freedom for us. I am Pre-PA, thank you for all your hardwork!! Keep doing what you do, you should have many more subscribers!
Thank you for the comment!
John's my fav PA-C channel!!!
Looking forward to the travel medicine video! :)
Great video!!
Thank you.
Do you have a video of the top 5-6 PA jobs graduate PAs?
please talk about per diem wound care gig. thank you.
Can you please make a video about debt as a pa?:)
Hey Maria, I would have to interview somebody or pull other people's numbers to make the video. Doesn't mean it's not possible.
If working 5 hours in an internal medicine private practice patient care outpatient hours twice a week, should I expect to be paid for the before and after clinic hours I put in doing chart prep and review calling patients. I do not have paid malpractice insurance, life insurance, 401k, health insurance, etc. My "5 hour" days actually end up being about 7 hour days sometimes longer. I am on Cape Cod, MA. Any solid info will be appreciated. Thanks.
M. Gilman PA-C for 24 years.
I've seen some employers not compensate for charting which is done once the day is over "seeing patients" which then forces you to take some work home with you. This is effectively wage theft as you are performing job tasks but not being paid for it. I would go to them and say that you're spending at least an extra hour doing callbacks / reviewing imaging / charting after your 5-hour shifts. You'll need 1 hour of "admin time" at the end (or beginning of the day) to call patients and chart appropriately for both billing purposes and from a medicolegal standpoint. If they want to pay you a slightly lower rate for doing admin work, so be it. I hope this helps.
@@JohnThePA It does. I was thinking along those lines. Thank you for confirming that for me.
Hello! I was wondering if you know anything about direct entry PA programs? I am a junior in high school and I was wondering what can I do now to maximize my chances of getting into a direct entry program.
I just applied to accelerated programs and I’d recommend shadowing and getting your cna license or some type of volunteer experience in a hospital. You should also apply early because the spots fill up extremely fast.
These need to come back mann 🤦🏾
Hey man , can you make a video about how to get job in usa as pa for migrants.
You would first have to attend PA school in the US and graduate / pass a board exam before you can get a job as a PA in the United States
Traveling RN’s can make over 100 an hour on average traveling….
Facts, travel RNs are making bank right now