Quote Originally Posted by Fyzzio View Post
Hi
there are a lot of businesses that look for people with a background in Health.
E.g Health Insurances, Health Education and Disease prevention services, Health departments within government organisations, Health and Safety Advisory services, Medical Equipment providers, etc.
But yes, as said above, for most of them you will require additional training.

And 'antisocial hours'? I don't think you know what you are talking about.
In Physio you can choose where and when to work. Yes, it might compromise your earnings and job availabilities, but you are free to chose. Ever talked to people in Real Estate? Lawyers? Nurses? Cleaners? Restaurant Industry?Police/ Fire service/ Ambulance? Electricians? Performing Arts? ... The list is endless.

Good luck,
Fyzzio
True, you can choose, but i just meant a lot of the more appealing choices that would really engage me, like professional sport, involve crazy amounts of travel, weird hours, lack of work-life balance. Just wondering if there are any career avenues I havent thought of where I could get an engaging job without having to sacrifice quite so much of my life. Private MSK has become a little stale for me over the last year or so. I still enjoy seeing/interacting with patients, but there is a LOT more 'autopilot' than there used to be, and i just worry that in another 5-10 years time there will be even more, and that i will have left it too late to make career changes. I'm 27 now, minimal financial commitments so would have the flexibility to retrain if i really wanted to. Medicine always appealed, but grad entry is supposedly insanely competitive so not sure how much of a realistic option it is

thanks for the replies so far =)