In electrical engineering, alternating current is considered the smarter design. Not constant. Not depleted. Just full power — then full off — in a perfect, sustainable rhythm.

Some urologists are starting to figure out that their careers can work the same way.

Baptist Health in Montgomery, Alabama is launching a brand-new Urology Hospitalist program, and they need one great urologist to run it. The schedule is 7 on / 7 off. That’s 26 weeks a year of serious, satisfying clinical work — inpatient consults, procedures, a hospital-based NP supporting rounds at both campuses — and 26 weeks that are entirely, completely yours.

Full pay. Full benefits. No clinic. No overhead. No RVU hamster wheel. No administrative avalanche. Just focused, high-quality urology for two weeks, then the door closes behind you for two weeks.

What does two weeks off every month actually look like?

It looks like hiking the national parks you’ve been bookmarking for a decade. It looks like actually being at your kid’s games — not just the ones you didn’t get paged out of. It looks like a standing tee time that doesn’t get cancelled. It looks like the trip to Tuscany that’s been on the whiteboard since residency.

This isn’t a step back. It’s a better design.

And Montgomery? Don’t sleep on it. Metro of 400,000 with a low cost of living that makes your compensation feel even bigger. The Alabama Shakespeare Festival. Montgomery Symphony. The Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail. Lake Martin’s 600 miles of shoreline an hour away. Great food — Central, Ravello, City Grill. Two and a half hours to Atlanta. Three to the Gulf Coast beaches. Four to Nashville.

This program is brand new, which means you help shape it. That’s a rare thing.

VISA candidates welcome.

Call Michael Case at 512-538-4351 or send your CV to michael@urologyrecruiting.com.

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Full power on. Then full power off. Repeat.

P.S. If you know a urologist looking for a straight clinical position, we have a great one of those in Montgomery too — the referral is always appreciated.