Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

Presumably, those who trained as surgeons, want to be surgeons. Sunk cost fallacy might come into play. A better analogy is someone who wants to be a software engineer, get burned out - and you say "hey, why not be a NOC technician if you can't handle it?"

Further, you assume a surgeon could just become a GP. They are different fields.

https://www.quora.com/Can-a-surgeon-also-practice-as-a-prima...

"Can a surgeon become a regular doctor?"

> They can try. But they would have no idea what they are doing. But legally, they could certainly practice as a primary care doctor. They would not be board certified, and could not sit for the ABIM exam, and would not be able to pass it if they did.

> The professions are also very different, primary care is more allied to the work of a physician, whilst a surgeon is trained to do serious surgery, not the kind a primary care doctor would do. So not sure even if you could be legally certified in both specialties you wouldn't loose your surgical skills if you spend a lot of time in primary care.

> Knowing what I know about the medical world in general I would advice against such a combination, a surgical residency is such a taxing one that you wouldn't have time to do anything else beside surgery, furthermore the required mental approach to do the work well as a surgeon or a primary care physician is also quite different.



Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: