Health & Fitness
NH Named One Of 2021's Worst States For Doctors: WalletHub
The Granite State and several of its New England neighbors were ranked at the bottom of the list.
NASHUA, NH — March 30 is National Doctors' Day, and with all health care professionals facing unprecedented challenges this year, personal finance website WalletHub compiled a new ranking to see which states were the best — and worst — for doctors to live and work. The list paints a grim picture of New Hampshire, which was near last place.
To compile the ranking, WalletHub examined 19 key metrics, ranging from starting salary and number of hospitals to the rate of physician burnout. New Hampshire was ranked 42 overall, just a few spots ahead of nearby Massachusetts at number 46 and Rhode Island in last place.
Because being a physician is such a demanding job, Don Brady, the interim chair of Health Care Administration at Methodist University in North Carolina, encouraged students to figure out which specialty best suits them while in medical school.
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"Doctors have very different lifestyles depending on their specialty," Brady said, explaining that an obstetrician/gynecologist can expect to be on call frequently on weekends and holidays, while emergency room doctors usually work a rotating schedule of three 12-hour shifts. "Medical students should determine the areas of medicine that interest them and then consider lifestyle. Doctors need to consider both for a happy life."
Here's a look at the top 10 states for doctors in 2021, according to WalletHub.
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- Montana
- Minnesota
- Idaho
- Wisconsin
- Kansas
- Tennessee
- North Dakota
- Nebraska
- Mississippi
- Iowa
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