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| Podiatric Residents & Physicians For podiatric residents and physicians. Co-hosted with APMA. | RSS: |
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#2 | |
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Senior Moment
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Quote:
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#3 |
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What does it mean to be employed by a healthcare organization?
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Ortho is probably the closest comparison to what we do and the trends seem similar although the actual numbers are different. Take whatever you want from it. What I took away is that compensation is slightly down, there are huge variances in compensation, geography played a role as well as what type of practice they were in. I see the same for pods with those in hospital based or multispecialty groups making more than podiatry groups which make more than small pod groups or solo practices. Growth is essential to absorbing cost and risk. Also the average salary reported was less than what I initially thought for ortho and I think the same is true for pods. I see a lot of similarities. I thought it may spur conversation since there seems to be interest among many in regards to ortho.
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#5 |
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Senior Member
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I think they are referring to ortho groups bought out by healthcare systems. An example would be a university system buying owning practices like Univ of XYZ and they have multiple hospitals/facilities.
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#6 | |
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Don't you think that there's a little more income that's being written off as non-taxable business expenses and therefore not being directly reported in the private and solo practitioners, though? It makes no sense that all the docs in the ortho groups bought out by hospitals would then make MORE money (maybe the senior/majority partners would do well if they negotiated smart, but the junior partners and associates generally get screwed in those buyouts). If that were the case that every doc's income went up in the hospital buyouts, why would the hospitals buy them? The hospitals would just hire relatively cheap orthos from solo practice or right out of residency and start their own "ortho group." Yes, the hospital wants to garner the well insured pts an established private practice might have, but they also want to make money off the doc's services. If you believe that the hospital run ortho groups are more profitable than the ones run in private practice, then you're really putting a lotta faith in hospitals as practice managers ![]() It's an interesting issue... and why I think you will see more and more super groups of specialists - who are not necessarily in the same practice but still allied for payer negotiations - popping up.
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Genesys Regional Medical Center, St John Hospital residency, Barry University School of Podiatric Medicine c/o 2009 Last edited by Feli; 05-03-2012 at 02:47 PM. |
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#7 |
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Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 88
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Why doesn't Medscape include podiatry. Because it is not an ABMS speciality, nor under the ACGME.
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#8 |
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Senior Member
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