The Buck Stops
The Buck Stops
Being a physician has served me well. It has given me purpose and identity throughout my career. It has also provided me with a stable income. I knew, however, from the beginning that things were changing. From the earliest days of practice, I pursued lazy side hustles and real estate. I learned about investing. You might suspect that I did this all out of pure personal interest. But there also was an aspect of self preservation. I didn’t like what I was seeing in medicine. The overreaching arch of compliance, the predominance of Medicare, and the rise of the administrator class all gave me pause. The buck stops. Not here, but in the pockets of the people running our healthcare system. The days of the primacy of the physician are waning.
I knew that I would never be able to stay in the traditional primary care practice, and make a reasonable living. I planned my escape in those early days. As the healthcare climate shifts, I see physicians getting caught in the crossfire. I suspect there will be a major wage readjustment.
Private practice
Compliance and healthcare policy have pushed physicians out of private practice and towards a group or hospital setting. These groups lag in efficiency by as much as twenty percent as the old practice models. As efficiency drops, costs spiral with expensive electronic medical records and costly compliance and training.
The solution is not to hire more physicians, they are already becoming less efficient and effective. So the system employs more administrators. More consultants. The healthcare dollar is seeping out of the clinicians hands and landing straight into the pockets of the mid level manager.
Every cent not spent on actual care is wasted in our system. The buck stops. Well before it reaches the clinicians hand.
The Replacements
Physicians are expensive. They are expensive to train. Expensive to employ. And there is a large barrier to entry into the field. This has created the perfect environment to support less educated intermediaries. Nurse practitioners and physician assistants get paid less to do some of the traditional physician roles. The barrier to entry is much lower. Many nurse practitioner schools are now online and create graduates with no consistent clinical oversight over the short duration of training.
Whether right or wrong, this creates a much more direct path to clinical practice. Given these new clinicians accept lower pay than physicians to do the same job, the buck stops at the clinicians door.
It finds its way into other pockets quickly.
Healthcare Reform
No matter who is in office, the cost of healthcare is spiraling. Our system threatens to topple over onto itself. The ballooning number of administrators, compliance officers, coders, and other support staff is rising.
Government begets more government. Compliance begets more compliance. Theses administrative costs will only rise in the future. To contradict these changes, the only well available to draw from is the physician compensation well. Not only have doctors been much maligned in the public culture, but are also the only major shareholder in the system without proper lobbying power.
The buck stops with the least politically powerful. If you haven’t noticed, that is the doctors.
Final Thoughts
The writing has been on the wall. Physician compensation is on the chopping block. Although we haven’t seen the effects yet, I imagine they are soon coming. I truly believe this. I spent the last decade building non traditional revenue streams, maintaining a private practice, and extirpating my pay source from Medicare and direct patient care.
It has served me well in my career and economic goals.
I was also lucky to not be saddled with a huge amount of educational debt.
I worry about how this will all play out for the young and newly graduated physicians of today. It can’t be good.
Spot on DocG. Spot on.
sad but true.
Sad that administrative bloat reimbursement and medical education debt burdens steal an ever larger portion of the health care dollar and the synergistic growth of midlevel medicine creates the perfect storm that insidiously and soon blatantly steals from the pockets of tge doctor backbone of our health care system. It is a perfect storm.
Unfortunately we forgot how to use our healthcare dollar to pay for what is important.
You are absolutely correct.
The “administrative class”…AKA our overlords.
Can we successfully revolt?
Not just us but our patients too?
The only way to successfully revolt is to move to a two tier system, one for the haves and one for the have nots. You missed a whole class of thievery, cost shifting. As long as setting a broken arm has 15 different price points depending on which trough your living in, the system is as opaque as Bernie Madoff’s balance sheet. The year I started Med school the first HMO was created. My buddy and I looked at each other in the library and said OH OH here comes the Earl Scheib $39.95 gall bladder! Interest rates in those days for med school loans was 18% payment due starting immediately (thank you Jimmy Carter) so all the whining about school debt doesn’t impress me. Every year after I went into private practice I effectively lost earning power. I maintained my EP by working harder, forming a group, negotiating like a Mafia Dom, and adding a side stream of revenue, pain medicine. Just wait till Medicine is FREE. Cost shifting was the whole basis of Obama care, to create an outcomes evidence based model . If the outcome of stable angina is eventual death and you can have a 100K bypass or a $20 bottle of NTG AND the time to death is roughly (or what ever outcome they choose to key on) equivalent according to the “evidence”. you’re getting the NTG even though that means you’re confined to a rocking chair. In the mean time the administrators are all drunk at parties doubling their salaries, and the DOCTORS OF NURSING are playing politics yapping about how they are “doctors” too! It’s why I kept my license active. If I want a Z-pack, I don’t want to have to run interference with a bunch of DOCTORS OF NURSING!
People with money will pay for good care. People with money will pay cash and you can offer people with money a fair market price and everybody walks away happy. My wife needed some routine gyn tests at the hospital they wanted $5500. I sent her 20 miles down the road to a cash on the barrel-head clinic and the bill was $550 cash including the radiologist fee for the 30 seconds he looked at her mammogram. If you had Obama care at $1200/mo that entire $5500 would be on the deductible and insurance would pay nothing. Free market capitalism is the solution, plus kill the lawyers, administrators, insurance companies and law makers. In my pain practice if someone came with no insurance and needed an epidural to get back on the road, I’d give em one at cost plus, about the same as I got for Medicare rates. They got better and could go back to work, I made cost plus and did a service to that family. The rest of it is all parasitic infestation.
Yep. “parasitic” says it all.
I appreciate reading your perspective. I’m on the other side of the fence. Where as a patient I’ve seen a wrong code, mean months of delays trying to work it out all the while care or testing is being delayed and issues are continuing or worsening. Or a MRI or Physical Therapy is denied by someone seated in an insurance office who is making a paper judgement , leaving one to spend time and energy to address the matter or to self fund if they can. NP’s or PA’s are Not equal to MD’s, in my opinion. My concern is that this growing support system can negatively impact care , if it reaches further into a position of replacement. I hope for all our sakes that there are positive improvements and an overhaul of our Medical Systems. Unfortunately, in general, we seem to follow the path that it has to get very bad and even worse and the worst , before it gets better.
I think both doctors and patients (and nurses and therapists) need to come together and fight for change.
agree!
Perspective from an owner of a billing company here. The shift over the last 10 years has been unbelievable. When I was working in a private multi-disciplinary pain management practice, almost 15 years ago, things were much simpler. If one of my providers asked me for a policy to follow, I could easily find it. I mean, easily. Fast forward to today, if I am asked the same type of question, it may take me hours upon hours hunting it down, and in many cases, hitting a dead end. Or, my favorite: an “unpublished” policy. As a billing company, this adds another layer of complexity when reporting back to my providers. Compliance has become huge in the billing companies as well. I can go on for days chatting about that topic. A full-time position in itself. I love my providers, and I feel terrible for them. I understand where you are coming from. Last year was exhausting, and this year is kicking off to be just as nuts. Private hospital groups are getting eaten up by big conglomerates. In some cases, multiple times within the last 5-10 years. Try getting ahold of billing in those organizations. It is like looking for Oz! All the meantime, adding layers and layers of administrative positions and adding time and frustration to resolve simple issues I would love to come together with the doctors and nurses to rally for change. Until then, I will continue working on the fiscal independence path. 🙂
I think it is easy to forget all the people downstream struggling from what is happening to healthcare. Thanks for reminding us.
As an RN though I’m no longer working I actually agree with everything you say about paper pushers , attorneys , non-medical CFOs, physician assistants and nurse practitioners ….I’m worried sick about my daughter who is a recent medical school graduate and a second-year medical resident in neurology..knowing what my husband who is a recently retired physician went through I can only worried about her future and see the sleep deprived days and nights she is having now and wonder what will come of it all.
I worry about the next generation too.