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Doctors cannot be easily offshored to another office or given 100% remote work. Software can, and it's happening, article mentions it at the very end. If it happened to manufacturing and factories, it could even more easily happen to software.


Doctors (and also lawyers) are replaced by technology as we speak. Now it is time for programmers to follow and it would be easier as there is less regulation involved then in case of doctors.

So not all bad.


That's what I don't understand. A doctor earns an average salary of say, $300,000, while a programmer building software that automates the job of a doctor earns an average salary of $75-100,000.

The value of the programmers is equal to all the people their programs replace, but yet, they are paid less than a single one of the individuals they replace.

Our society doesn't properly value programmers. If it did, there wouldn't be an H1-B issue. There are more Americans who want to be doctors than America will legally allow to exist. There's no cap on how many programmers there can be, yet America throws its hands up in the air wondering why.

The answer is obvious: America doesn't value programmers appropriately.

You can't say, "We can't afford to pay what programmers are worth." How about pay sales people less. Why do sales people get 30% commissions? Why do CEO's get millions?

The only real solution to the problem is to properly value the work and pay for it.


If America doesn't who does?


Radiology is one of those "this can be outsourced" things - https://healthmanagement.org/c/imaging/issuearticle/outsourc...

This is known as 'teleradiology' ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teleradiology )




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