PCPs Outvalue Specialists as Hospital Revenue-Generators
Family physicians generate $1.4 million in revenues for their
hospitals, about 7.5 times the value of their compensation. Orthopedic surgeons
bring in 5.5 times the revenue value of their compensation, data shows.
Physician specialists
continue to generate the most money for their hospitals, but primary care
doctors still provide more bang for the buck, a Merritt Hawkins survey released this week shows.
Orthopedic surgeons were paid $497,000 on average in 2015
and generated about $2.7 million in revenues for their hospitals, which is
about 5.5 times the value of their compensation. Family physicians with an
average starting salary of $198,000 in 2015 generated $1.4 million in revenues
for their hospitals, which is about 7.5 times the value of their compensation,
the survey reported.
A further breakdown showed that an invasive cardiologist
and a neurosurgeon each generated about $2.44 million, and a general surgeon
generated about $2.1 million. Family physicians generate an average of $1.5
million in net revenue annually for their affiliated hospitals, while general
internists generate $1.8 million.
The average $1.56 million revenue for all medical
specialties included in the survey is up from $1.44 million in 2013, the last year
Merritt Hawkins conducted the survey. Revenue generated by 11 of the 18 medical
specialties increased in 2015 when compared to 2013.
Irving, TX-based Merritt Hawkins, one of the nation's
largest physician recruiting firms, compiled the data in a survey of hospital
CFOs. The figures include both net inpatient and outpatient revenue from
patient referrals, tests, prescriptions, and procedures performed or ordered in
the hospital.
Travis Singleton, a senior vice president at Merritt
Hawkins, says the fact that inpatient/ outpatient revenues in 2015 were up from
the 2013 survey "is pretty telling," and in sharp contrast to the
nationwide push for preventative medicine and reduced utilization.
"It is counter to a lot of the rhetoric you hear in
healthcare. Net inpatient/outpatient numbers should be declining at a huge
rate, and the reality is they didn't. They went up," Singleton says.
"That shows that doctors remain the engine of our healthcare economics.
There are no two ways about it. The fundamentals of our economics in healthcare
have not changed and people need to understand that."
"That doesn't mean we aren't taking steps in the
right direction around preventative care. Our continuum of care is the best
it's ever been and really trying to curb readmissions. We have done an
admirable job," he says.
We are looking at volumes in
hospitals that we have never seen before. Specifically, if you look at the
numbers around specialists, that is the most telling," he says. "With
the rate that Baby Boomers are hitting our systems, it would have been foolish
to think these numbers would go down no matter how great a job we're doing."
Specialists Top
Compensation Lists
Orthopedists ($443,000), cardiologists ($410,000), and dermatologists ($381,000) are among the highest-compensated physicians in Medscape's Physician Compensation Report 2016, while pediatricians, ($204,000), endocrinologists ($206,000), and family physicians ($207,000) maintain a firm hold on the bottom rung of the compensation ladder that they've held for the past three years.
Orthopedists ($443,000), cardiologists ($410,000), and dermatologists ($381,000) are among the highest-compensated physicians in Medscape's Physician Compensation Report 2016, while pediatricians, ($204,000), endocrinologists ($206,000), and family physicians ($207,000) maintain a firm hold on the bottom rung of the compensation ladder that they've held for the past three years.
When compared with Medscape's 2015 survey, allergy and
pulmonology saw a noticeable decrease in income (-11% and -5%, respectively).
Pathologists and plastic surgeons remained stable. The rest of the physician
specialities reported an increase.
The greatest increases appeared among rheumatologists and
internists (12%), followed by nephrologists and dermatologists (11%).
The Medscape survey shows that self-employed specialists
and primary care physicians make more money than their employed colleagues.
Employed primary care physicians earn about $207,000, compared with
self-employed peers who earn about $229,000.
That the gap is narrowing, however, as employed primary
care physicians have seen the highest percentage compensation increase (10%)
compared with self-employed PCPs (8%) and specialists (6%).
Resource: http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/finance/pcps-outvalue-specialists-hospital-revenue-generators
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