Discover nonclinical options as a physician. The Medical Fusion Conference gives you more control of your career, income, and lifestyle. Join our mailing list

2011 Medical Fusion

November 11-13

ARIA Resort & Casino, Las Vegas

$979 Physician
$849 Non-Physicians

Refer Medical Fusion to a colleague who registers receive a 10% Referral Rebate.

Call us at (866) 924-7929

Get our PDF brochure
Join our mailing list!
Our Other Events

Freelance MD

Twitterstream
Freelance MD
What are physicians saying?

Saturday
Apr212012

Networking 101

I wanted to write just a quick blurb about networking.

It's often discussed in business circles, but seems so crass.

Personally, I hate the term, but it does help if you understand how to build your group of business associates.

For what it's worth, here is a short list of things that I've seen help individuals build their business contacts over time.

1. Provide Value

The number one way you can begin building your connections with others is to figure out how to provide them value.

Here's the honest truth:

Our most precious commodity is time, and no one feels like they have enough.

For a person to take time out of their already busy schedule to get to know you, you have to be able to demonstrate that you are able to make it worth the investment of their most precious commodity. 

This is especially true of those people who are "in demand" or "known" within their fields.

Find some way to add value to the work they're already doing and go from there.

2. Don't Oversell Yourself

If you're trying to build your network of colleagues and business associates, one of the worst things you can do is oversell yourself.

There is a huge temptation to initially try to impress people with your accomplishments, real or embellished, but don't do this.

If you oversell yourself, people will eventually find out over time and you will look foolish at best.  At worst, you'll be seen as a fraud and your colleagues will feel deceived.

Be honest about your abilities and experience level. 

3. Be a Person of Integrity

Being careful not to oversell yourself goes hand in hand with being a person of integrity.

What this means is simply that you show up for appointments with your associates, you act and speak in a professional manner about other colleagues and competitors, and you come through when you commit to an assignement.

Of course, having integrity is much more than those simple tasks above, but failing to do the basics often demonstrates a larger problem with a person's character.

Be above reproach in your business dealings and your current contacts will speak highly of you, often leading to new opportunities. 

Act in a shady manner, and the direct opposite will happen.

4. Listen

Here's a very simple tip...

When you're with someone with whom you'd like to connect-- especially if that person is an "important" person in their field-- stop talking.

Abraham Lincoln once said, "I'd rather be silent and be counted a fool, than open my mouth and remove all doubt."

If you want to build connections with others, don't wax eloquent about all your opinions and insights.  Listen to them and figure out how you can learn from them.  You'll be better off for the learning and the other person will walk away thinking you're a brilliant conversationalist.

5. Don't be Too Familiar

After you do meet someone, don't be too familiar.

Nothing screams "desperation" more than a clingy person who is always around.

Don't waste a person's time with personal stories, long anecdotes, or constant contact.

If you do "click" with someone, give the relationship time to develop.  There's a difference between a business associate and a friend, and over time you'll be able to determine which direction the relationship will go.

Many of my current  friends I met through work and other "business" endeavors, but it always took time for the friendship to develop. 

Be friendly, but not too familiar, with those you've recently met.

Thursday
Feb162012

The Top 10 Reasons You Should Go To Medical School... And The Single Best Reason Not To

medschoolJeremy Weaver is a medical school student and one of the editors over at Uncommon Student MD where he's written a really good post on The Top 10 Reasons You Should Go To Medical School, And The Single Reason Not To.

Whether you're a first year medical student or a practicing physican, there's a good chance you've asked yourself the quesion, "WHY the @#$% DID I GO TO MEDICAL SCHOOL?" Here are a few EXCELLENT reasons... and one bad one.

Just as the blisses of Christmas break was ending for most of us tortured souls who fly the banner of "medical student," and sail these uncertain scholarly seas, Uncommon Student MD got some serious traction with medical students around the world. I believe timing had a large part to do with the explosion in its popularity. Simply put, after christmas break a lot of medical people were thinking, “what am I doing here?!” - A case of mass buyers remorse.

It is an understandable and laudable question to be sure. If we spent half the time wrestling with the question of what to do with our lives that we spend OMGing and LOLing on Facebook, we would probably all be Nobel laureates (at the very least we wouldn’t use retarded abbreviations as much). There are a lot of bad reasons to go into medicine and there are a lot of good reasons not too… Conversely there are also many great reasons TO pursue medicine as well as a lot of bad reasons not too. Confused? Me too, but I do know that there are two sides to every pancake (perhaps three if you screwed the recipe up).

F. Scott Fitzgerald once said that, “The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function.” So, even though I happened to agree with a few salient points made in the aforementioned article, I am trying to follow the advice of good old F. Scott and entertain the flip side of the coin. Maybe incite some wrath while I’m at it… one can only hope.

I am not sure, but I am of the opinion that there are as many good reasons TO go to med school as there are NOT to go (we should do a prospective cohort study to find out). At the very least I know there ARE more reasons than the sole example our friend Dr. Ali Binazir espoused. And so without further hemming and hawing… The top 10 reasons you SHOULD go to medical and 1 reason you should RUN WHILE YOU STILL CAN… in no particular order.

Read the rest of the post here: The Top 10 Reasons You Should Go To Medical School, And The Single Reason Not To.

Sunday
Oct022011

A Non-Clinical Physician Conference?

Who is the Medical Fusion Conference for?

Any physician who wants more control of their income, career, and lifestyle.

  • A plastic surgeon who want's to learn how to invest in real estate.
  • An internal medicine doc who want's to retire and write a book.
  • A dermatologist who want's to leave clinical practice and consult to big pharma.
  • A family practitioner who want's to leave Medicare and Medicate and start a concierge practice.
  • A surgeon who want's to make sure his retirement is secure.
  • An ER doc who want's to travel and work internationally.
  • A Pediatrician who want's to publish a children's book.
  • A cosmetic surgeon who's ready to grow his cosmetic practice or medical spa.  ; )
  • Any doctor who's thinking of leaving clinical practice.
  • Any doctor who want's to spend more time with your family and kids.
  • Any doctor who's looking to increase their income.
  • Any doctor who's looking for a change.
Wednesday
Sep282011

Pro Golfer Zach Johnson Mentions Medical Fusion 

It's not every day that a Masters Champion mentions your medical conference.

On September 27th, PGA golfer and 2007 Masters Champion Zach Johnson tweeted the following to his 55,000 Twitter followers:

All you physicians, docs, and health experts, check out this website! www.MedFusionConf.org great info, good people, and lots of big words!

All of us with the Medical Fusion Conference appreciate Zach's kind words and the plug for our event.

Momentum for the conference is building so if you haven't already registered, be sure to get your name in for this life-changing event.

 

Wednesday
Sep212011

Online Marketing for Physicians

Mr. Tannus Quatre of Vantage Clinical Solutions will be giving a talk at our Medical Fusion Conference entitled, "Online Marketing for Physicians." 

Mr. Quatre is a Physical Therapist and one of the founders of Vantage.

According to Mr. Quatre, after hearing his talk on online marketing, participants in our Medical Fusion Conference will be able to do the following:

  1. Understand how online marketing is being used by healthcare professionals to reach new audiences and retain current clientele.
  2. Be familiar with specific tools and online resources used to develop an effective online presence including the company website, pay-per-click advertising, and social networking through sites such as FaceBook and Twitter.
  3. Understand the right portfolio of online tools to use for their practice based upon their specific resources, market, and budget.

If you'd like more information on Mr. Quatre's talk at our Medical Fusion Conference, check out his lecture description HERE .

Be sure to register early for our Medical Fusion Conference.  Medical Fusion is right around the corner and seats are going fast!

 

Wednesday
Sep212011

Physician Writing & Publishing

In this short video, Dr. Greg Bledsoe discusses how physicians can learn more about writing and publishing books for the public.  In addition, Dr. Bledsoe introduces Dr. Julie Silver, Chief Editor of Harvard Health Publications, and discusses what Dr. Silver will be teaching at the Medical Fusion Conference.

More Information on Physician Writing and Publishing:

Harvard Writing Course

Harvard Writers

The Value of Cross-Semination

An Interview with Physician & Author Ken Cohn

Your Book & Its Niche

Rookie Mistakes to Avoid If You Want to Publish a Book

Go the F**K to Sleep: A Bestselling Book

Do You Listen When You Write?

Dumbing It Down is Downright Disrespectful

Writing a Book Proposal is Like Writing a Rx

Getting Great Publishing Advice


 

Tuesday
Sep202011

Handling Your Finances as a Physician

As a physician wanting to control your career, you're going to need to get your finances in order first.

Over the past few posts we've discussed the idea of taking responsibility for yourself and not waiting for others to come save you.  You've hopefully begun reading the blogs of a few of the adventurous souls who have found ways to live interesting lives, and learned about some of your career options here on Freelance MD.  In this post, we're going to discuss the first and primary means of addressing your confinement in a frustrating career.

If you want to begin living a different life, if you want a new career path and you want to branch out from the doldrums of your current career, the first and most important thing you will need to address is your inability to handle your personal finances.

How do I know you aren't handling your finances well?

Well, I don't mean to stereotype you, but let's face the facts: you're a Westerner living in a very materialistic culture that often defines itself by its material possessions, and you're in a profession that puts pressure on you to look and act in a successful manner.  

There are a few American physicians who have developed patterns of proper financial responsibility, but most have not, and one certainly doesn't develop these patterns by accident. These patterns and habits are developed through many deliberate choices day after day until they become second nature, but they are fought tooth and nail by the culture around us.  As physicians we feel the "need" to drive a certain car, have our kids in a certain school, have a certain type of house in a certain neighborhood, and be members of certain clubs.  The current of life in medicine carries us away from sensible financial decisions, and many, many physicians are drowning in their careers due to bad decisions regarding money.

This toxic financial culture in medicine was discussed in the popular book, The Millionaire Next Door .  In this text, authors Stanley and Danko discuss who the really rich in American society are, and usually it's not the professional class.  They note that there's a difference between looking rich and being rich.  Many physicians look wealthy, but when you scratch beneath the surface they're drowning in debt and working 80-100 hour weeks just to break even.  They overspend because they feel entitled to nice things due to their prior sacrifice of years in school and long hours at work (or are simply very foolish), never realizing until too late that they're boxing themselves in financially and completely undoing their financial future.

Of course, while physicians themselves are mostly to blame for this (remember, personal responsibility...you are not a victim), medical schools could do a lot more to help the situation.  It is appalling to me that we have a medical educational system that takes bright, idealistic students, trains them to be physicians, and then casts them out into this current healthcare world without any sort of training or discussions in financial management, various specialty salaries, billing and coding, practice management and the like.  It's more than appalling really, it's completely unethical, and those leading our nation's educational establishments should be embarrassed by what's happening.  

Dr. Robert Doroghazi, author of the book, The Physician's Guide to Investing: A Practical Guide to Building Wealth , said it this way: 

"I believe the position of the academic medical establishment to deny medical students financial instruction is naive, hypocritical, and indefensible.  They should acknowledge that money is important.  It is never as important as your patient.  It is never as important as your family, your health, your freedom, or your integrity.  But is is important."

Unfortunately, I do not believe this ridiculousness in our medical educational system will change any time soon.  As a matter of fact, I received a phone call recently from a medical student who is torn between a couple of different specialties and called to ask my opinion about his situation.  One of the things he said that stuck with me was, "Every time I try to ask questions of people at my medical school about salaries or financial issues, I'm either looked at in a weird way or people tell me not to worry about it. It's like they're wondering, 'Why would you even be asking that?'"

The naivete of our training coupled with a culture that pushes consumerism and materialism has undone the careers of many physicians.  It's a tragedy. 

The good news is that it doesn't have to be that way. You can make choices that alter your financial future and therefore alter your life.

Here's a project...

If you are serious about career modification and you're serious about making significant changes to your future, then sit down and take a good hard look at your finances.  If you're honest, what you'll find is that a lot of things your money goes towards are "wants" not "needs" and if you're ever going to be free, you need to take that "want" money and use it to pay down debt and increase savings so you can break free of the rat race you're in.  

This must be done.  

There's no other way.

If you cannot take this first step, then all the other steps are superfluous. 

We're going to be talking more about this concept in the future, and we're pleased that Dr. Setu Mazumdar is one of our authors.  In addition to being a board certified Emergency Medicine physician, Dr Mazumdar is a financial planner and the founder of Lotus Wealth Solutions where he counsels physicians on money issues.  Be sure to check out his posts here on Freelance MD and watch for more good counsel from him in the near future.  

For those of you who want to go ahead and begin getting control of your finances, a good place to start is the Money 101 website from CNNMoney.com .  No website is perfect, of course, and we're not unequivocally endorsing any site or any person (please use your head), but the Money 101 site does have a lot of tools to get you started if you need someone to simply help point the way.

So there you go, your first homework assignment on your road to freedom: handle your finances.

It can be really tough at first, but in the end it is absolutely necessary if you want to modify your career and begin living a better life.  

Keep checking back here on Freelance MD since in future posts we're going to be discussing specific things you can do to improve your financial lot and how to move forward with your plan to develop a new, more exciting future.

Tuesday
Sep202011

Physicians and Lifestyle Design

In the last couple of posts we've discussed the idea of taking responsibility for yourself and "building your own ship" and we've also gone through a few commonreasons why physicians aren't the best at career modification.

In this post, I'd like to spend a little time introducing you to the idea of "lifestyle design," something that has become a bit of a buzz-phrase in the business world but as far as I can tell hasn't penetrated the world of medicine just yet (for a lot of reasons).

I'll begin with a personal story...

When I jumped off the academic track in 2006, I wasn't exactly sure what I wanted to do as a career but I knew I wanted something unique.  My idea was to design a career that was flexible, fun, adventurous, and meaningful, all the while paying my bills and being a responsible spouse and parent.  Simple, huh?

I spent months thinking about how to do this as a physician.  I searched websites and blogs.  I spoke with mentors and colleagues.  I read the literature, all to no avail.  There seemed to be no conversation about a career like this in medicine.  I mean, there were a few articles about volunteer opportunities or non-traditional careers, but nothing really like what I was trying to create.  

What I found, though, was that while the medical community was silent about how to develop a very non-traditional and interesting career, the business world had already awakened to the idea.  Within the world of business, the idea of becoming a "free agent" and overhauling your career through "lifestyle design" was beginning to pick up steam. 

Around this time I picked up a copy of the book Free Agent Nation by Daniel Pink.  I'm not sure how I found this book, but it became a sort of manifesto for me.  In this book, Dan explains how more and more individuals were escaping their cubicles to become independent free-lancers and living their lives with increasing flexibility and empowerment.  It was a great read and it hit me at a very important time.  Through this book I realized that I was not alone in my desire for more autonomy, and that a lot of workers who had already yanked themselves off the grid were thriving.  I was hooked.

The second book I read was a book that has become a bit of a cult classic already, Timothy Ferriss' text, The 4-Hour Workweek .  This book is a basic introduction to how Tim built a stream of residual income and then used his extra time and money to explore his interests and live a more interesting life.  It was Tim's book that introduced me to the term "lifestyle design," and while the phrase might seem a bit hokey, it's a very powerful concept.  Basically, what Tim discusses in his book is the idea that it is possible to live an incredible life if you prioritize correctly, live frugally, and develop your entrepreneurial side.  Some have criticized the book recently, explaining that no productive person-- not even Tim Ferriss himself-- really only works four hours a week-- but I would argue that that's not really the point.  The catchy title sells books, but it's the mindset Tim describes that is the reason why the book is an important introduction for individuals who feel helplessly caught in a hamster wheel at work.  Tim's point is that you can-- through ingenuity and hard work-- leap off the hamster wheel and into something much better.

So how does all this apply to physicians?

Well, when you have a career discussion with most physicians, it often boils down to whether or not that individual wants to continue practicing clinical medicine or go into a nonclinical job.  There's nothing wrong with either, mind you, and I have friends who have great careers in each; however, for me and for many other physicians, I suspect, this approach is just too simplistic.

The fact is, I like clinical medicine.  I've spent a of of time getting good at what I do and I'd like to continue to be able to help people by providing good clinical care to patients who need it.  I also like many aspects of the nonclinical opportunities available to physicians-- things like consulting, writing, medical device development, and many other niches really appeal to me.

My main question is not whether I want to practice clinical medicine or jump into a nonclinical career, it's how do I design my life to be able to practice medicine, participate in the nonclinical activities I enjoy, and still have the flexibility to pursue life outside of medicine?  Discussions about clinical versus nonclinical are at their core too reductionistic for most modern physicians.  What most modern physicians really need to be having are overarching discussions about how to design a lifestyle that incorporates the multiple facets of their career interests and also does not overlook the ultimate (and most likely unspoken) goals they have for their lives. This is a much deeper conversation, but one that is desperately needed today in this time of significant upheaval in our healthcare system.

So where do you begin if you're a physician and you are interested in exploring this idea of "lifestyle design?"

Well, don't go to the career advice section of your specialty journal and certainly don't go to the HR person at your hospital or academic institution.  

In my opinion, you should begin by checking out the conversations going on in other fields.  There are some incredible websites built around some really creative and interesting people who are living fascinating lives and teaching others how to do the same.  Check out the following as a starting point:

Once you immerse yourself in this culture you begin to see possibilities that you never would have realized before.  What's more, as a physician there are even more possibilities available to you than for the typical person, if only you'll step out and take a little risk.

Over the last few years this idea of lifestyle design has been a focal point of my thinking when it comes to career moves and ultimate goals.  I've invested a lot of time, cash, and sweat into learning how to build a unique career, and my hope with Freelance MD is that we can use this website as a vehicle to help other physicians, just like you, succeed in designing a lifestyle and career they truly enjoy. 

Tuesday
Sep202011

Physicians & Career Modification

Non-clinical and non-traditional medical careers are a common theme at the Medical Fusion Conference.

If you peruse the agenda for our event, you'll find lectures on a variety of topics—writing and publishingreal estate investingconcierge medicinemedical device developmentbusiness skillsleadership, journalism, and many more.

The common theme of all these lectures is the idea of career change, or as I like to call it, career modification. It's the idea that as a physician, you aren't forced to accept the status quo; you have options, and there are a variety of ways in which you can harness your skills and personality traits.

Having said this, however, I must say that it is very difficult for the typical physician to make any kind of career change.  It's been a long time since I've met a physician who wasn't significantly frustrated with their career, but I'd say maybe only one out of fifty, or even one out of a hundred, of these frustrated physicians are actively taking steps to modify their career in some meaningful way.  It's a strange phenomenon, but it does seem to be a cultural trait in our profession.

Look, I'm not a professional career counselor.  If you want professional guidance, I'd suggest Ashley Wendel, whose entire career is focused on helping physicians transition into more satisfying careers.  However, for those of you who can tolerate my amateurish anecdotes, here are my top three reasons why I believe physicians have a difficult time modifying their careers...

(drum roll please)

1. Physicians are Narrowly Trained

A typical physician is overall a very narrowly trained individual.  

The majority of us were science majors in college and then spent a minimum of seven years being crammed full of medical minutia.  When we finished our medical training, we had a fairly firm grasp of our area of clinical expertise, but not much else.  Few physicians have had any significant exposure to personal finance, the legal system, business transactions, popular writing, art, negotiations, investing, or anything of the like.  Many of the physicians who I know who do have a special area of expertise outside of medicine sort of fell into it, or were raised in it by their family upbringing, not necessarily because they sought it out.  

When you compare a physician to an attorney, for instance, and the diverse professional experience of the typical person in law or business, it's easy to see why attorneys and business-types seem to transition in and out of careers with a lot more ease than physicians.  We know the Krebs Cycle; they know contracts, and corporate structure, and business appropriateness.  It's not that we physicians are any more or less as professionals than our peers in other professions because of our narrow training, it's simply that what works in our narrowly defined world doesn't necessarily work elsewhere.  

Physicians who have decided to launch into business, or anything else for that matter, without sufficient prep time usually find just how lacking in knowledge they really are.  Our narrow training puts a premium on our clinical knowledge and skills-- it takes a high investment of time and resources to obtain a medical degree and become a licensed physician-- but it also condemns us to a narrow career path unless we actively seek out further training.  

The good news is that with further training, career transition is much easier.  Here at Freelance MD we're committed to exposing physicians to training in a multitude of diverse niches.   We don't want the "narrow training" issue to be an excuse anymore for any physician considering a career move.

2. Physicians have Difficulty with Ambiguity

This reason takes a little more to explain.

Think about your medical training and your current medical career.  How did you get where you are today?  

Few careers are more systematized for more years than a career in medicine.  Most physicians began thinking about medical school before college and worked towards medical school as a goal from the beginning of their undergrad education.

Take and excel at my core science classes...check.  Take MCAT...check.  Get letters of recommendation...check.  Send in applications and pray...check.

Once in medical school our lives are completely structured to the point of exhaustion.  We are routed into our various specialty tracks and move along the medical assembly-line like widgets, getting the final stamp of approval and then shipped to a place of employment where we dig into our clinical careers, join a medical society, buy a house, begin paying off our school loans, and well, not much else, really.  

When we finally take a look around-- years into our clinical careers-- we have no professional experience other than medicine from which to draw and no practical experience in how to transition into something that doesn't have a structure or system to it.  

Become an entrepreneur?  

Where's the fellowship for entrepreneurial medicine?  

Develop a medical device?

Isn't there a masters degree in medical device development somewhere?

Write a book?  

I'd love to, but I don't have time to go back and get a college degree in English.

Does this seem familiar?

Physicians are so trained in a systematic educational experience of structure and hierarchy that it is very difficult to imagine how an ambiguous career move might work.  The idea of setting sail without a predetermined path and system to plug into leaves many physicians completely flummoxed. 

Instead of taking a machete and beginning to forge our own path through the career jungle, we wait for someone to build a superhighway that we can follow, complete with rest areas and gourmet coffee shops.  Of course, this rarely (read, never) happens so many physicians sit around saturating in the magical thinking that someone will come along with a foolproof plan to save us, and getting more desperate and frustrated when that person doesn't show up.

I could go on and on about this point, but I will use this as an easy transition to my final reason physicians have a difficult time modifying their careers...

3. Physicians are not Risk-Takers

Alright, everybody calm down.  

I know you're brave and calm in tense situations.  I know you can thread an angiocath, or intubate during a code, or your steady hands can find the pulsating bleeder with the best of them, even when everyone around you is losing control.  I know you're good under pressure, but this is not the same as being a person who is comfortable accepting calculated risk.

What I've found in conversations with physicians is that their risk profile is extremely low.  Yes, they're frustrated with their careers, but leave their jobs, start a company, move to a different part of the country, invest actual cash in an endeavor? Are you out of your mind?  Greg, those things are so risky...

Look folks, here's the facts...

You will never grow, transition to a better career, get from where you are to some better place, move beyond your current boundaries, or do anything of significance without assuming some measure of risk.  It's impossible and if you're waiting for that risk-free career move to show up, well my friend, I hope you've got a lot of time on your hands.

Many physicians have a difficult time with this aspect of career modification, even sadly, when the only risk is of the potential damage it might do to their professional standing.  I know a number of physicians, for instance, who deep down do not like academic medicine, but who persist in academics because they simply can't bear the thought of what people might say if they left or how it might affect their standing with their peers.  They're afraid they'll be dropped from this committee or not invited to speak at that conference.  They persist in their academic positions not for the love of teaching or the stimulation of their research; they persist because of the fear that they might lose something in the transition.  Their positions have become shackles that confine them, and their peers have become juries whose approval they must have.

When I speak to a physician who is hung up on this aspect of risk, I council them to of course make sure the transition they're considering makes sense-- talk to mentors, read up on the area they're considering jumping into, spend considerable time planning the transition.  However, in the end most of these career decisions come down to taking a jump off a cliff, and when I get to this point in the conversation I always discuss with them the risk of the status quo.

You see, career modifications are not a discussion of risk versus no risk.  They're a discussion of risk versus risk-- the risk of a career change versus the risk of staying in the same place.

I ask them, "What is the risk of staying in your current position for another year, or two, or three?"

If they're honest, they begin to see that staying in the status quo also carries significant risk, and when this is realized, a potential jump doesn't seem as frightening.

The point is that for most physicians, being able to tolerate risk is not something that comes naturally.  We like systems.  We like order. We like knowing our next step and we like having safety nets.  We work in a culture that demands perfection each and every day and the idea of stepping out without a finalized gameplan is terrifying to most of us.  We're creatures of habit with a significant dose of OCD in us-- medical school selects for these traits-- but we have to realize that we'll never begin to grow past where we are if we don't begin stepping out.  The idea of growth without risk is ridiculous, and we need to recognize this fallacy and move beyond it.  Embracing calculated risk-taking isn't optional, it's mandatory for career modification, and the sooner we accept this the sooner we'll begin moving towards a more fulfilling career.  It's that simple.

So there you have it.  My three reasons why physicians have a difficult time with career modification.  

In future posts I'm going to explain more about what I mean by career modification and some unique perspectives on what is available to physicians in today's modern, fully-wired, world.

Until then, check out Ashley's posts here at Freelance MD or her website.  Her advice is excellent for those of you considering a career change, much better than the musings of physician blogger, and almost risk-free.

Almost.