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Canadian Medical Residency Guide - Taking control of your future medical career and financial life

Section I

Starting Private Practice

Case Studies

Starting Own Practice

Sanjay is a second-year medical student who isn’t sure what career option he’d like to pursue, but knows he doesn’t want to work in a hospital or academic setting. Opening up a private practice in his hometown is looking very attractive but he has heard that start-up costs and overhead can be very steep. He plans to stay in the same location until he retires but worries that with his financial debt after medical school, he will not be able to pursue his ideal practice for many years.

The majority of physicians will spend part of their time in a private practice setting. A list of specialties that would accommodate Sanjay’s independence includes Anesthesiology, Community Medicine, Dermatology, Diagnostic Radiology, Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Adult Neurology, Occupational Medicine, Ophthalmology, Pediatrics and Psychiatry. Sanjay could potentially open a clinic with training in any of the above specialties, but in some cases the procedures or conditions he could treat or manage would be limited compared with what he could do in a hospital setting. For instance, if Sanjay trained in ophthalmology, he could do LASIK surgery, but perhaps not be involved in neuro-ophthalmology cases.

Surgical specialties may not be so appealing to Sanjay because surgery requires an operating room in a hospital; however, surgeons may have private offices outside of a hospital for their clinics. In some cases, surgeons may be able to operate outside of the hospital setting; facial plastic surgeons are an example. Pathologists require access to laboratories and usually work in conjunction with hospitals, making private practice unattainable. Pediatric neurologists may have private practices, but they are usually associated with a hospital because of the rarity of pediatric neurological conditions. Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation is generally practised in hospital. Radiation Oncology and Nuclear Medicine require access to technology usually owned by hospitals, making private practice unrealistic.

To see all nine case studies, download the complete 2011/2012 Canadian Medical Residency Guide for FREE.

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