I am not suggesting I want to run an unethical "pill mill". I want my shop to be an all-inclusive place for therapy, group classes, and a place to have other psychiatric needs treated. Would this model fall into the high end bup treatment with high profit margin you referenced?
Therapy is not particularly profitable. Building a facility that includes other services will generally reduce profitability, especially if the practice is insurance driven. As I said, it IS possible to build a high profit margin “treatment program” with mostly cash patients and derive a profit margin off providing therapy. However, this is not very easy and depending on the geography you’ll have a lot of competition.
It’s difficult to give you an estimate because this depends too much on local conditions. But suffice it is to say, if you want to build a “treatment program”, there’ll be a startup cost that’s in the several hundred thousand range. It’s probably best to project out your profitability prior to applying for a business loan. This is fairly complicated, which is why I don’t recommend it unless you know what you are doing.
Starting a solo outpatient addiction psychiatry practice can be trivially easy. However, these practices don’t typically have a “pill mill” model. Similar to a general outpatient private practice, you treat general high functioning working professionals with a substance use disorder, and spend 30 min for med management and 45 min for combined therapy or meds. Addiction psychiatrists who are the best paid that I know are typically in this kind of arrangement. There are a FEW who have majority stakes in large treatment facilities and become wealthy in that way, but as I’ve said, that’s rare and involves taking on a lot of business risk.
What is a pill Mill vs an actually legit business?
A “pill mill” refers to a very specific kind of outpatient Suboxone practice, where most of the patients have public insurances and the provider writes only Suboxone scripts with some specific add on service (i.e. onsite therapy as dictated by certain regulatory requirements, UTOX, etc). Typically these practices will have 5-10 Suboxone visits per hour for each “prescriber”, who can be anywhere between an addiction psychiatrist (rare), to a general NP who has an X number (common). Given people have poor access to buprenorphine and there’s a crisis, I don’t necessarily think that this model is “unethical”. However from a purely business perspective, the profit margin of such a business in general is very low, and is especially low on a per hour basis for an addiction psychiatrist. This is why many of them are actually structured as non-profits, and plenty of them actually have partnerships with government entities and get subsidies. If you are addiction boarded, I don’t actually recommend starting such a program unless you really want to serve the indigent, as I said above. In fact if you want to serve the indigent, it’s best to just work as an employee, IMHO.