Apprehensive, Many Doctors Shift to Jobs With Salaries
American
physicians, worried about changes in the health care market, are
streaming into salaried jobs with hospitals. Though the shift from
private practice has been most pronounced in primary care, specialists are following.
Last
year, 64 percent of job offers filled through Merritt Hawkins, one of
the nation’s leading physician placement firms, involved hospital
employment, compared with only 11 percent in 2004. The firm anticipates a
rise to 75 percent in the next two years.
Today,
about 60 percent of family doctors and pediatricians, 50 percent of
surgeons and 25 percent of surgical subspecialists — such as
ophthalmologists and ear, nose and throat surgeons — are employees
rather than independent, according to the American Medical Association.
“We’re seeing it changing fast,” said Mark E. Smith, president of
Merritt Hawkins.
Health
economists are nearly unanimous that the United States should move away
from fee-for-service payments to doctors, the traditional system where
private physicians are paid for each procedure and test, because it
drives up the nation’s $2.7 trillion health care bill by rewarding
overuse. But experts caution that the change from private practice to
salaried jobs may not yield better or cheaper care for patients.
“In many places, the trend will almost certainly lead to more expensive care in the short run,” said Robert Mechanic, an economist who studies health care at Brandeis University’s Heller School for Social Policy and Management.
When
hospitals gather the right mix of salaried front-line doctors and
specialists under one roof, it can yield cost-efficient and coordinated
patient care. The Kaiser system in California and Intermountain
Healthcare in Utah are considered models for how this can work.
But
many of the new salaried arrangements have evolved from hospitals
looking for new revenues, and could have the opposite effect. For
example, when doctors’ practices are bought by a hospital, a colonoscopy
or stress test performed in the office can suddenly cost far more
because a hospital “facility fee” is tacked on. Likewise, Mr. Smith
said, many doctors on salary are offered bonuses tied to how much
billing they generate, which could encourage physicians to order more
X-rays and tests.
Mr.
Mechanic studied 21 health systems considered good models of care —
including the Mayo Clinic and the Palo Alto Medical Foundation — and
discovered that many still effectively rewarded doctors for each
procedure. “It doesn’t make any sense,” he said.
Hospitals
have been offering physicians attractive employment deals, with incomes
often greater than in private practice, since they need to form
networks to take advantage of incentives under the new Affordable Care
Act. Hospitals also know that doctors they employ can better direct
patients to hospital-owned labs and services.
“From
the hospital end there’s a big feeding frenzy, a lot of bidding going
on to bring in doctors,” Mr. Mechanic said. “And physicians are going in
so they don’t have to worry — there’s a lot of uncertainty about how
health reform is going to play out.”
In addition, Medicare
had reduced its set doctors’ fees over the last decade, while insurers
have become more aggressive in demanding lower rates from individual
practices that have little clout to resist. Dr. Robert Morrow, a family
doctor in the Bronx, said he now received $82 from Medicare for an
office visit but only about $45 from commercial insurers.
Dr.
Cathleen London practiced family medicine for 13 years outside Boston,
but recently took a salaried job at a Manhattan hospital. She said she
accepted a pay cut because she could see that she was losing ground in
her practice. “I think the days of what I did in 1999 are over,” she
said. “I don’t think that’s possible anymore.”
The
base salaries of physicians who become employees are still related to
the income they can generate, ranging from under $200,000 for primary
care doctors to $575,000 in cardiology to $663,000 in neurosurgery, according to Becker’s Hospital Review, a trade publication.
Because
of the relatively low salaries for primary care doctors, Dr. Suzanne
Salamon said that for the last two years she has had trouble filling a
prestigious Harvard geriatrics fellowship she runs.
Dr.
Howard B. Beckman, a geriatrician at the University of Rochester, who
studies physician payment incentives, said reimbursements for primary
care doctors must be improved to attract more people into the field. “To
get the kinds of doctors we want, the system for determining salaries
has to flip faster,” he said.
Dr.
Joel Jacowitz, a cardiologist in New Jersey, and his 20 or so partners
decided to sell their private practice to a hospital. In addition to
receiving salaries, that meant they no longer had to worry about paying
malpractice premiums themselves or finding health insurance for their
staff members.
Dr.
Jacowitz said that the economics drove the choice and that the only
other option would have been to bring in more revenue by practicing bad
medicine — ordering more heart tests on patients who did not need them
or charging exorbitant rates to people with private insurance. He said
he knew of one cardiologist in private practice who charges more than
$100,000 for a procedure for which Medicare pays about $750.
“Some
people are operators and give the rest of us a bad name,” he said,
adding that he had changed his opinion about America’s fee-for-service
health care system. “I’m fed up — I want a single-payer system.”
Dr.
Kirk Moon, a radiologist in private practice in San Francisco, also
sees advantages for the nation when doctors become employees. “I think
it’s pretty clear that sooner or later we’re all going to be on salary,”
he said. “I think there’ll be a radical decrease in imaging, but that’s
O.K. because there’s incredible waste in the current system.”
Various
efforts to change incentives for doctors and hospitals are being
tested. An increasing number of employers or insurers, for example, pay
health systems a yearly all-inclusive payment for each patient,
regardless of their medical needs or how many tests are dispensed. If
doctors order unnecessary tests, it costs the hospital money, rather
than bringing it in.
And
instead of offering bonuses for productivity — doctors cite pressures
from hospital employers to order physical therapy for every discharged
patient or follow-up M.R.I. scans on every patient who got an X-ray —
some hospital systems are beginning to change their criteria. They are
providing bonuses that reward doctors for delivering high quality and
cost effective care, such as high marks from patients or low numbers of
patients with asthma who are admitted to the hospital.
“The
question now is how to shift the compensation from a focus on volume to
a focus on quality,” said Mr. Smith of Merritt Hawkins. He said that 35
percent of the jobs he recruits for currently have such incentives,
“but it’s pennies, not enough to really influence behavior.”
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