20 years from now, FP MDs will be obsolete

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MacGyver

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Your specialty is being taken over by PAs and nurses especially.

Say goodbye to your specialty. 20 years from now, the only doctors who pursue FP will be those happy making 50k per year.

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A bit bored today, eh. To be honest, I used to have thoughts of generalists jobs being "taken over", but then I realized that practically every specialty out there is susceptible to allied health professionals encroaching on their turf. I guess you haven't met any of the many PA's, NP's, and other allied health professionals doing the exact same jobs as dermatologists, surgeons, ENT docs, anesthesiologists, ob/gyn etc either, but they are out there in private practice and in academic hospitals too. They actually make MD's money because they are salaried employees for MD's; that's part of why there is this turf war to begin with, because MD's keep training allied professionals to do their job so that they can make more money in their own practice. I was actually working with an ENT doc while he was pushing our own hospital to give him permission to allow his PA to do larygnoscopies with him not even present in the room so that she would generate income while he could do whatever he wanted to do. We get kind of biased working in inner-city med schools too because patients here are oftentimes just happy just to be seen by somebody and they oftentimes just assume that a white coat is an MD, but the fact is, out in suburban areas, many patient populations will demand to see an MD for their cold or med check even when it's not neccessary. They won't accept a PA or NP as their PCP. Anyways, that's just my two cents. You really can't predict anything in medicine these days to tell the truth.
 
The sky is falling!! The sky is falling!!!
 
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I think it is very possible that FM will become obsolete in areas where patients have access to every specialist under the sun, under one big roof! But what troll MacGyver...sorry, I mean symian crease MacGyver......oh sorry, I mean nuchal translucency MacGyver, is forgetting is that the vast majority of US healthcare is not provided in big cities and urban areas (primary care at least), and instead this care is provided in small town America. And small town primary care can never be completely practiced by midlevels. That is because small town FM docs do stress tests, C-sections, vag deliveries, vasectomies, and all aspects of "cradle to grave" medicine. A midelevel will never be qualified to handle that sort of caseload. But unless AAFP and AMA gets off their ass, I can see the trend moving toward allowing midlevels to obtain PCP status, and then lower reimbursement might be likely. But this will only be in the cities, because it just won't work in rural America. So that is why I am still going into FP, even though I am a practicing PA still now. MacGyver has a track record of starting threads just to inflame people. In fact he has already done this exact thread about a year ago. What the title of the thread really should be is

" Why I am qualified to be the healthcare Don Juan, Don Corleone, or Don Quixote!!!" He would really have some explaining to do then. He has never revealed his true education, and my guess is he is either a first year PA student or wannabe!!
 
So let's hear it MacGyver, what is your educational background. The last reply on this thread totally peaked my curiosity now...
 
MACGYVER IS A TROLL......
anyway, pa's already do everything on the short list above except solo c-sections. lots of pa's do routine vag deliveries, vasectomies, stress tests, biopsies, and sigmoidoscopy in addition to serving as pcp's for several of the nations largest health plans( mostly hmo's). fp's will always have a place in medicne both rural and otherwise so stop worrying....pa practices tend to thrive only where md's don't want to work. someone needs to see the pts after all....and there are plenty to go around...remember the baby boomers. they are about to retire and create the largest health provider shortage in history......
 
Well if FP MDs become obsolete, that opens up the field for FP DOs. 👍
 
Originally posted by PACtoDOC
That is because small town FM docs do stress tests, C-sections, vag deliveries, vasectomies, and all aspects of "cradle to grave" medicine. A midelevel will never be qualified to handle that sort of caseload.


Not true at all. PAs do all of that stuff.

because it just won't work in rural America. So that is why I am still going into FP, even though I am a practicing PA still now.

Why in God's name would you do that? You are blowing 100k in debt just to do the same things a PA does? Thats a poor decision.
 
Hey MacGyver or should I call you JKDMed???

Troll,

You know ZERO...my friend, I try not to put too much weight in what a kid with 3 years in college thinks.
Yeah, I could teach my local gas station attendant to do alot of technical tasks that PA's do...but WHY WOULD I?? I could get cheaper automotive advice, but I think I'll go to the experts.

Hey big Mac, are you even in college?? Do you live at home with mommy and daddy? I want to know from what chair of expertise you sit upon! Probably a folding chair in the basement of your parents ranch home.

Save your commentary for the Boy Scouts little boy.

Family Practice is the Back Bone of today's medicine. A midlevel is nothing more than "sweet and low" in a cup of gas station coffee. I prefer the quality of Starbucks.
 
Originally posted by Freeeedom!
Hey MacGyver or should I call you JKDMed???

Troll,
So is MacGyver really JKDMed. I always thought JKDMed was a cool guy...
 
Oh yes MacGyver, and monkey's fly out of your ass too!! I triple dog dare you to get online and show me an autonomous PA in a rural setting who practices OB solo. It just doesn't happen. There is not a PA anywhere able to do C-sections. Show me one and I'll buy you a Lazyboy to put into that corner of your parent's home, instead of that Troll chair you occupy.

Emedpa,
My buddy and pal, I usually agree with you wholeheartedly, but I think you overstated your last comments. PA's do not provide routine OB care in a solo fashion in the rural sticks, and they certainly don't do routine vaginal deliveries without a back up. We all know nurse practitioners have the territory in OB, and even they cannot do solo rural OB alone. A midwife can, but that is a completely different discussion since they can't do anything else.

Rural FP is simply different than urban FP. It can never be emphasized enough what a rural FP can bring to a town. Nothing can replace it, with the exception of ten specialists who remember their clinical medicine and are willing to move to the sticks. And we all know that will never happen.
 
I did not mean to imply that pa's were doing rural deliveries solo as a rule(although there are some places where it happens. I have a buddy who works in a solo island practice in alaska who does deliveries. they try to anticipate the due date and ship folks out to the med ctr for delivery, but sometimes folks deliver at 37 weeks at 3 am on a sunday.) , but there are ob pa's in large inner city hospitals doing simple deliveries with ob backup available down the hall.
 
Let us not divert our attention from the elimination of a Troll(s).

Also let us not make strange "I have a buddy in Greenland who does..." it only perpetuates myths and bad vibes.

FP is the backbone.
MacGyver and Jkdmed are the tailbones. Sorry guys, but you spew alot of crap at well meaning FP residents, take it yourself.
 
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Hey Freeedom,

It has been a long time since we talked last. The perspective I have gained through the first 2 years of medical school have served me well, and you were right about a lot of things you might not even remember discussing with me. I agree though, it is impractical to use the example of an isolated provider to set an example. And I honestly don't know of any PA's delivering babies in any inner city hospitals. I would be curious to know where this occurs, because I can't even imagine a hospital that would allow it. Rural Alaska is certainly the equivilent of a 3rd world country. But that is not a good example, because it is not set up for the intended use of a PA to deliver. Hell, if you want to use that example, I was delivering babies as a paramedic when I had to, but no one in their right mind would sign up to allow a paramedic to administer their OB care and delivery from the get-go.

And yes, MacGyver is truly the coccyx of this forum. No indirect, direct, or articulatory technique on this earth can remove him from the rectum he has penetrated!!
 
matt- not to make a big issue of it but there is an entire specialty organization for ob pa's. this is from their website accessible at aapa.org

What are the duties of an OB/GYN PA?

The duties of an OB/GYN PA include the health care management of women from adolescence onward. Individual PA duties are dependent on the scope of his or her supervising physician's practice and the desire of the physician to delegate certain tasks or responsibilities. The range of duties is as varied as the number of different OB/GYN practices. In a survey sent to members of APAOG in 2000, members reported that their most frequent encounters involved annual pap/pelvic and breast exams, gynecological complaints, family planning, menopause management, and prenatal care. The most frequently performed procedures were ultrasound, colposcopy (including endocervical curretage, LEEP and cryosurgery) and endometrial biopsy, but other procedures also listed included IUD and Norplant insertion and removal, artificial insemination, vulvar/cervical/breast biopsy, pessary fitting, vaginal delivery, abortion, D & C, hysteroscopy, laminar inserts and circumcision. Members also noted that they were able to use their primary care training to mange their patient's medical conditions both during pregnancy and in the
non-pregnant state. Duties, again, were usually dependent on the needs of the practice and the interests and training of the OB/GYN PA.
 
Come on Emedpa, you can do better than that my friend! 😉
Show the whole story if you are going to show one side of it. Below is the rest of the story from the same website you quoted. As you will see, there are a tiny handful of hospitals that are crazy enough to consider allowing a PA to provide OB care in delivery. And they are all basically indigent hospitals in primarily one city...NYC. This is absolutely not the norm for PA's to be involved in deliveries, and it should not be. PA's although highly qualifed and probably more than capable of a simple vaginal delivery, will never be accepted as a substitute in this area. This is a surgical specialty whether we want to call OB/GYN's surgeons or not, and PA's will never have a primary role in surgery. With the exception of midwives, whom I feel are dangerous anyway (hear comes another discussion...oh hell!!), anyone delivering a baby has an obligation to be able to intervene SURGICALLY when things go south. A midwife can never know when south is on the horizon, so that is why I hate the entire concept of midwives delivering babies outside of birthing centers. Our country has simply always expected a higher level of care in certain situations, and OB care is one of those places. Don't get me wrong, PA's have a very important role in our healthcare system, but it is time we all sat back and accepted that PA's simply have no business in some settings. Here are some of these settings:

Surgery as the SURGEON
Delivery as the OB
Radiology as in FINAL READING
Anesthesia as in PUT YOU TO SLEEP

That leaves an entire spectrum of things open to PA's. Its not fair to misrepresent what PA's actually do just to further some verbal debate. I would even venture to say that if you called these hospitals on the below list that they will not tell you that PA's openly and customarily deliver babies on their floors. And if they do, they are WAY the exception and not the rule. That statement from the AAPA OBGYN caucus, however ambitious, is ludicrous. It states that OB PA's are able to do as much or as little as their supervising physician will allow. That simply isn't true. Hospitals have the final say as to who gets credentialed to do what in their hospital. Sure, if the OB doc wants to start sending the PA to do home deliveries, or if they want to start delivering in offices, then they can let whoever they want do the delivery. But hospitals are unlikely to be accepting of anyone delivering babies on their property that aren't OB board certified physicians. Hell, even FP docs with OB training have a terribly tough time convincing hospitals to allow them to deliver babies when there are OB's on staff already. I am sick of AAPA caucus organizations trying to convince the public that PA's routinely do more than they really do. I am all for autonomy for PA's in almost every setting, but sometimes political groups just take things a bit too far and stretch the truth a bit too much. Here is the statement:

Is it legal for PAs to deliver babies?
Women's health and obstetrics are routine components of PA education. State laws, hospital regulations, physician and patient preference and the training and expertise of the PA influence the extent to which PAs provide obstetrical care.
Most state rules and regulations do not address PAs and deliveries. Only four states delineate the specific context of PA participation in obstetrical care. [See the AAPA's "Summary of State Law References to PA Participation in Obstetrical Care and Deliveries".] Barriers to PAs who want to perform deliveries usually occur at the level of hospital regulations.

Where are some of the hospitals that do utilize PAs in Labor & Delivery?
1. Sinai-Grace Hospital, Detroit, MI
2. Oakwood Hospital , Dearborn, MI
3. Cambridge Health Alliance, Cambridge MA
4. Brooklyn Hospital, NY
5. Coney Island Hospital, NY
6. Lennox Hill Hospital, NY
7. New York Methodist, NY
8. New York Hospital Medical Center of Queens, NY
9. Harlem Hospital, NY
10. Staten Island Hospital, NY
11. Weiler Hospital, Bronx, NY
12. Park Ridge Hospital, Rochester, NY
13. Christian Hospital, Newark, Delaware

[Additional hosptials will be listed here as APAOG learns of them. If you are aware of any not listed here, please email APAOG with that information so they can be added to this list.]

And to add further info, I visited several of the websites of these hospitals and found absolutely nothing regarding their use of PA's on OB. So that is where I care to leave this debate. Adios guys.
 
ok, I am willing to meet you halfway. pa's are qualified to perform simple, uncomplicated vaginal deliveries but should have immediate access to someone who can perform a c-section, etc if things go south. didn't mean to start a big debate, it's just that pa's do this in school and are qualified to do so. I am sure that you(like I ) delivered several kids as part of your ob rotation with the ob guy jsut kicking back in a chair and watching from across the room. peace friend-e
 
PAC,

you are wrong about NPs. There are 3 or 4 states which allow them to do solo OB. Thats the whole concept of NPs in teh first place--they are built around independent practice.
 
Wow Macgyver, thanks for being such a light for my path. I could never have figured that out!! Geez, where did you get your medical professional's definition book?
 
I understand. You're mad because you just realized you dropped a 100 grand to do FP. Not a wise decision. In 15 years, you'll be lucky to make 50k with the influx of PAs, nurses, naturopaths, and all the other people scooping out your turf.
 
Hey Mac,

Some of us were smart enough to have our education fully paid for, and some of us were also able to choose any specialty we wanted. I honestly don't care if all FP's end up making 50K per year, but do you really think that is going to happen when PA's themselves make 50% more than that. I am not even a resident yet Dr. Smegma. And ND's??? Are you serious?? Even a chiro looks like a rocket scientist next to those weirdos. Rural FP will always be little house on the prairie-style medicine. Some of us are going into it to preserve the tradition of taking care of families for generations to come. Glad to see people like you are in it for the money, because patients see right through that I promise you. Mac, you have still never laid your credentials out for all to view. My guess is you are some washed up taxi driver in NYC who was a little too slow to cut the mustard in college! This is your fetish...to get everyone worked up and then play with Spankie!
 
Originally posted by PACtoDOC

I honestly don't care if all FP's end up making 50K per year, but do you really think that is going to happen when PA's themselves make 50% more than that.

Who says you are competing with just PAs? You've also got naturopaths and NPs to deal with. Everybody wants a cut of the FP pie, moreso than in any other specialty by far.

And ND's??? Are you serious?? Even a chiro looks like a rocket scientist next to those weirdos.

Quacks or not, sadly, the state legislatures of California and Arizona saw fit to give naturopaths status as primary care physicians and has given them full script rights. The FPs were obviously too busy to pay attention to what these fools were doing, and now its come back to bite them in the ass.

Money talks and bull**** walks.
 
MaC, as always you embelish, fantasize, or flat out fetishize about your version of the supposed truth. ND's have nothing near full prescription rights in any state, and if you don't believe me, visit this link and click on the PDF. file.

http://www.canp.org/downloads/SB907_FactSheet.pdf

You are an utter joke Mac. And you still have provided no info as to your level of expertise. My guess is that your expertise is limited to sebaceously active palms!! :laugh:
 
Hey MacGyver...do you live in the basement of your parents house??? Just curious, because you have the insight of a college freshman...and not even a bright one at that!

Listen bud, you have zero clue of what the reality of health care is today. Your visions of NP's practicing in cornfields performing CV surgery and getting paid 100k a month are obviously delusional. Furthermore, I had a nice discussion with some PA's in May, and they weren't so optomistic regarding their future in primary care...as many of the jobs (in the midwest) were for surgical PA's...furthermore, while this may not be a nationwide trend, many of the practices in this area only needed "part time" midlevel help. Sure this is only regional, but the more midlevels pour into the market, the less their value increases.

And as for a naturopath...you can't ACTUALLY believe they provide legitimate healthcare do you?? Why don't you take a walk on over to www.quackwatch.com and read up.

Listen, the Osteopathic Family Practice doctor is the most VALUABLE asset in health care. I am not even a FP resident, but I see the combination of OMT and conventional primary care as valuable as GOLD. Ain't no homeopath, chiro, or naturopath doing the same.

Here is a note from quackwatch re: scope of "naturopathic practice"
Scope of Practice
Most naturopaths allege that virtually all diseases are within their scope. The most comprehensive naturopathic publications illustrating this belief are two editions of A Textbook of Natural Medicine (for students and professionals) [16,17] and two editions of the Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine (for laypersons). [18,19] The text, which has more than forty contributors and more than a thousand pages, was issued in 1986 and updated with loose-leaf inserts until 1996 [16]. A bound second edition was published in August 1999 [17]. The encyclopedia had 630 pages in its first (1990) edition and has 958 in the second (1998) edition. Joseph E. Pizzorno, N.D., president of Bastyr University, and Michael T. Murray, N.D., a faculty member, edited the textbook and co-authored the encyclopedia. Both books recommend questionable dietary measures, vitamins, minerals, and/or herbs for more than 70 health problems ranging from acne to AIDS. For many of these conditions, daily administration of ten or more products is recommended -- some in dosages high enough to cause toxicity. Some treatments are recommended even though the authors indicate that the evidence supporting them is preliminary, speculative, or even conflicting. Both books discuss dubious diagnostic tests as though they have validity. Arnold Relman, M.D., Editor-in-Chief Emeritus of The New England Journal of Medicine, has written a devastating review of the 1999 textbook in which he concludes:

Many of the treatments recommended in the Textbook . . . are not likely to be effective, and treatments proven to be effective are often totally ignored. This could endanger the health and safety of patients with serious diseases who relied solely on care from a naturopathic practitioner [20].

Pizzorno and Murray have claimed that "in most instances, the naturopathic alternative offers significant benefits over standard medical practices." [21] For the few illnesses where their encyclopedia acknowledges that medical treatment is essential (because otherwise the patient may die), they propose naturopathic treatment in addition. In many passages, they describe prevailing medical practices inaccurately.

The encyclopedia claims, for example, that medical treatment of hypothyroidism involves the use of desiccated thyroid or synthetic thyroid hormone, but that naturopaths prefer desiccated thyroid. Pizzorno and Murray also claim that "health-food-store thyroid preparations . . . . may provide enough support" to help a mild thyroid problem, even though the FDA requires such products to be hormone-free. Scientific physicians consider desiccated thyroid (made from dried animal glands) inferior because its potency can vary from batch to batch. Synthetic thyroid hormone does the job efficiently. Using a product that might contain no hormone is even more ridiculous. The book also claims (incorrectly) that taking one's armpit temperature upon awakening is a reliable test for thyroid function.

The chapter on angina gives a glowing recommendation for chelation therapy, which the scientific community regards as worthless. The chapter on "detoxification" claims that 25% of Americans suffer from heavy metal poisoning and advocates periodic fasting plus various supplements and herbs. The chapter on "cellulite" claims that a gotu kola extract has "demonstrated impressive results." The "Candidiasis" chapter espouses Dr. William Crook's fad diagnosis of "candidiasis hypersensitivity" and includes Crook's three-page questionnaire for determining the probability that "yeast-connected problems are present." The questionnaire does not have the slightest validity.

In The Complete Book of Juicing, Murray recommends juices for treating scores of ailments. He also advises everyone to use supplements because "even the most dedicated health advocate . . . cannot possibly meet the tremendous nutritional requirements for optimum health through diet alone." [21] These ideas lack scientific validity.
 
Its absolutely comical to see you guys go into full denial mode and fall all over each other trying to issue stupid BS attacks on me.

BTW freedom, I never said that naturopaths were qualified doctors. Yet that didnt stop the state legislatures from expanding their scope and giving them status as PCPs did it?

State legislatures respond to monetary issues. They know nothing about clinical competence. When they heard that they would be able to save money on state healthcare costs by letting NDs into the system as PCPs they jumped at the chance.

Its just too bad the MDs/DOs didnt take notice and try to stop it or at least raise a ruckus. Damn shame really.
 
Hello,
First of all, I'm a little confused here. To Macgyver...WHO IN DA HAILLL ARE YOU?? and What credentials do YOU bring to the table to make all these prognostications?? You do not know SHIZZNIT about private practice or primary care. What are you..PREMED?? MED STUDENT??

My credentials, board certifies FP in a BIG city who has to deal with these issues on a DAILY basis as opposed to THEORIZING about them...Nuff Said.
And by the way, NO, I am NOT threatened by NP's or PA's, and I will tell you why...

NP's and PA's for the most part KNOW their role in the healthcare system, and do a good job at what they do which is to serve as PHYSICIAN EXTENDERS, that is get patients seen thay are not able to be seen by the MD for whatever reason (patient load, physician distribution, etc). And 95% of these people know their role and do not try to "replace" the physician. Now there is that 5% which I will call the "renegade" variety of NP's and PA's that do things like push for autonomy and try to erode on limitations.
With reagrds to PA's, they will ALWAYS be under the board of medicine, and thus they will ALWAYS be mandated to have MD supervision. Now I know that there are arrangements where there is a group of PA's acting pretty much autonomously, with some semi-active MD acting as the "referral", "chart-reviewer/signer", and basically a rubber stamp to whatever a PA does. This happens primarily in underserved areas that have a hard time recruiting MD's. To those who just "rubber'stamp" charts without proper review, they are just putting themselves AND THEIR LICENSE at risk. Cause in todays world, all it takes is just ONE BAD OUTCOME to ruin that arrangement. If you look at the discipline file of the different state medical boards, you will see quite a few docs getting DISCIPLINED for not properly supervising PA's.
While it is a very popular "sky is falling" mantra, I am not concerned about Nurse Practicioners either. Now they fall under the Board of Nursing, which gives them a little more autonomy, but 95% of nurse practitioners are very good about knowing their limitations and staying within those bounds. You are letting a the 5% "renegade" group that makes lots of noise scare you about primary care.

Here is why I as a primary care physician am NOT concerned about the mid-level practicioners nor am I concerned about non-MD practicioners...
1-with ANY medical field comes a scope of practice, and with that scope of practice comes a certain amount of responsibility and liability. People going into the PA or NP field know FULL WELL the amount of responsibility and liability involved and are happy with those guidelines. THATS WHY THEY CHOSE TO BECOME NP/PA as oposed to MD's. Because they are happy with those guidelines, 95% of them don't want to overstep those bounds. In other words, they know that they are not MD's, and don't want the level of responsibility and liabilty of MD's.

Points to ponder...
-Ever try to get a NP to take on call by themselves?? GOOD LUCK (there are hoewever PA's that do it for the doc they work for)
-Ever try to get an NP/PA to manage a critically ill "TRAIN WRECK" patient by themselves?? FAT CHANCE...they are then QUICK to remind you of their limited scope/traininig if you try to get them to see/manage those types of patients. Even in simpler cases, while they are good at most of the bread-and-butter type cases, they tend to run from the complex stuff and are quick to knock on your door.

You will find that the "rate-limiting" factor in the perceived "encroachment" of NP/PA is the fact that 95% of them do not want to have the increased responsibility/liability that an primary care MD has. THATS WHY THEY BECAME NP/PA. They are quick to remind you that if they wanted the incerased responsibility/liabilty of an MD, they would have gone to MD school.

Other turf issues.....

Ophthalmologist vs.Optometrist...This reminds me of a conversation I had with an Ophthalmologist in Oklahoma, one of the states where optometrists, because of their lobbying efforts, got laser iridectomy privelages. I asked her about the negative impact of this, and she was not the least bit concerned, because:

a) It does not affect her business, because she is GOOD at what she does and she still has a long line of patients waiting to see her (she ain't hurtin for business).

b) with the exception of a HANDFUL of optometrists (primarily located near the optometey school in Talequah), most of the optometerists in the state are not gonna mess with it because they do not want the increased responsibility, nor the increased LIABILITY (malpractice premiiums will automatically RISE). PLUS they don't want to have to deal with the COMPLICATIONS that can potentially result from their doing that procedure. Do you think most of them wanna pay higher malpractice insurance rates?? I don't think so.

Psychiatrists vs. PhD psychologists...there's been a lot to do about that battle in New Mexico. Do I think it will affect the MD psychiatrists?? NO, because the MD's that are in practice are NOT hurtin for business and it is often a LONG WAIT to even get to see one (ever try to refer your patients to a psych?? you will see what I mean...oops I forgot macgyver, you ar what...PREMED?? MEDSTUDENT?? you are not even in private practice). This expanded scope is in response to the ACCESS issues in NM, where 75% of the state's psychs are located in 2 cities, leaving the majority of the state with no access. Just because someone has a PhD doesnt mean that they are going to try to have prescribing privelages. While there will be some that will pursue it, many do not want the increased responsibilty and liability of an adverse drug reaction or want to deal with the interactions of these meds with the non-psych meds.

BUT WHAT ABOUT THE DECLINING REIMBURSEMENTS IN PRIMARY CARE???

Guess what...reimbursements for ALL FIELDS is declining. The model/guideline for reimbursements is the medicare and medicaid fee schedule. All 3rd party payors base their rates on a percentage of the medicare
rate. No matter what specialty you are, everybody is getting paid less, and the procedures are being reimbursed lower. Ask any GI how much he got for an endoscopy back in the days compared to now.

BUT WHAT ABOUT THE NP's GETTING ADMIT PRIVELAGES IN COLUMBIA IN NYC?

The biggest mistake people make is assuming the following...That what happens in the legislature or in academic/university based systems automatically translates into the real world private pracfice of medicine...WRONG!!! Lets take one of their newly minted Dotorate in nursing grads, and send him/her out into the real world...

-Which hospital credential committee/medical staff is gonna give them hosptial privelages??
-Who runs these medical staff/credentialing committees of hospitals?? you gueessed it...MD's
-Which insurance company is gonna credential them for reimnbursement??
-Which malpractice insurance carrier is gonna credential them for coverage in this very litigious age?
-How many nurses are REALISTICALLY gonna jump on that bandwagon. Remember that 95% of the nurses out there went into nursing to be a NURSE, not a doctor. If they wanted that, they would have gone to medical school. Th 5% renegade variety may make some gains, but they will be limited at best, cause when they have to deal with the level of RESPONSIBILITY, and LIABILITY as that of an MD, they are quick to back down.

WHAT ABOUT THE NATUROPATHS??

Again, there may be a few renegades that want to have full script privelages, but the majority of them went into naturopathy to PRACTICE naturopathy, that is use alternative methode of healing. They can't manage a critically ill patient, and to use NON-naturopathic meds with the potential of side effects, flies in the face of their baseline philosophy, which is to heal the patirent using natural alternative modalities, and promote preventative care. The day one of them has a med complication from going out of their natural scope, the malpractice insurance companies will be all over them, and we'll then see how "expanded" they want their scope.

SO basically, I do NOT think that FP will ever become obsolete. While we as well as others DO have our challenges (reimbursement, liability, etc), I am good at what I do and I LOVE what I do, and that is evident in the care I give my patients. NP/PA/ND's do not affect my patient flow, nor do they affect my checks I get from medicare and other payors. Now Macgyver, I suggest that you actually GO to medical schol and LEARN SOMETHING about REAL WORLD medicine before trolling this newsgroup with your mindless drivel.

PEACE!

-Derek Sampson, MD
 
Yep...could not have said it better myself. I agree 100%.
I also agree physicians need to be more active in state legislative issues as well.
Mac, time to pack up and sell your wares to some other chumps cause your snake oil ain't sellin.
 
Originally posted by dksamp

With reagrds to PA's, they will ALWAYS be under the board of medicine, and thus they will ALWAYS be mandated to have MD supervision.

You cant make that statement with any confidence. Many PAs have started lobbying state legislatures to change the state boards of medicine so that PAs have their own supervisory branch like the nurses have.

Now I know that there are arrangements where there is a group of PA's acting pretty much autonomously, with some semi-active MD acting as the "referral", "chart-reviewer/signer", and basically a rubber stamp to whatever a PA does. This happens primarily in underserved areas that have a hard time recruiting MD's. To those who just "rubber'stamp" charts without proper review, they are just putting themselves AND THEIR LICENSE at risk. Cause in todays world, all it takes is just ONE BAD OUTCOME to ruin that arrangement. If you look at the discipline file of the different state medical boards, you will see quite a few docs getting DISCIPLINED for not properly supervising PA's.

Thats BS. State medical boards hardly ever revoke licenses, and suspensions only occur in willful negligence cases (i.e. drunk doctor performing surgery). State medical boards are very loathe to punish doctors at all.

While it is a very popular "sky is falling" mantra, I am not concerned about Nurse Practicioners either. Now they fall under the Board of Nursing, which gives them a little more autonomy, but 95% of nurse practitioners are very good about knowing their limitations and staying within those bounds. You are letting a the 5% "renegade" group that makes lots of noise scare you about primary care.

FACT: In 25 states, NP scope is determined SOLELY by the state nursing board, with NO oversight by doctors or others in any fashion.

FACT: In those 25 states, NPs have full script rights (including all scheduled narcotics); no MD co-signature, no MD oversight, no MD collaboratin regs. In addition these states also allow NPs to run their own clinics AUTONOMOUSLY with no MD oversight or collaboration. These states have listed NPs under primary care physician status. They are eligible for DEA #s to prescribe narcotics, they can admit and discharge patients from hospitals.

To say that NPs have "a little" more autonomy than PAs is a joke. In 25 states, they are functionally equivalent to FP MDs and can do EVERYTHING that an FP MD can do.

There is no comparison between NPs and PAs.

People going into the PA or NP field know FULL WELL the amount of responsibility and liability involved and are happy with those guidelines. THATS WHY THEY CHOSE TO BECOME NP/PA as oposed to MD's. Because they are happy with those guidelines, 95% of them don't want to overstep those bounds. In other words, they know that they are not MD's, and don't want the level of responsibility and liabilty of MD's.

thats bogus. If that were true, how do you explain the original NP scope changes? If they were really "satisfied" with their current scope, why are all midlevels constantly going to nursing boards or state legislatures to have their scopes expanded?

The facts remain. In 25 states, NPs can do anything that an FP MD can do. They can deliver babies on their own, they can administer injections, they can do bloodwork, chest tubes, all with NO MD supervision.

Even in simpler cases, while they are good at most of the bread-and-butter type cases, they tend to run from the complex stuff and are quick to knock on your door.

Bread and butter stuff accounts for 90% of FP medicine. Do you have any idea how that kind of potential market share affects FP MDs? Hint: its not good.

Psychiatrists vs. PhD psychologists...there's been a lot to do about that battle in New Mexico. Do I think it will affect the MD psychiatrists?? NO, because the MD's that are in practice are NOT hurtin for business and it is often a LONG WAIT to even get to see one (ever try to refer your patients to a psych??

You are incredibly myopic. The current market is not that relevant. You sound like most doctors--as long as you dont see an immediate threat, you put your head in the sand and just assume that things wont change and that it will always be the way it is right now.

You need to think long term and look with better eyes than that. Thats what the NPs are doing, and as a result have captured substantial market share from MDs. Sure, maybe NPs dont want to manage complex patients, but the thousands of FP docs coming thru residency in the future will quickly find that they are indeed competing against NPs for the "bread and butter" cases.

BUT WHAT ABOUT THE DECLINING REIMBURSEMENTS IN PRIMARY CARE???

Guess what...reimbursements for ALL FIELDS is declining.

You are an absolute fool if you dont think the influx of NPs into FP hasnt had an impact on declining reimbursement.

Why pay an MD $200 when an NP will do the SAME JOB for $60?

NPs drive down wages. Sure, managed care and malpractice also hurt wages, but once again you are incredibly myopic if you think NPs havent had an impact.

The model/guideline for reimbursements is the medicare and medicaid fee schedule. All 3rd party payors base their rates on a percentage of the medicare

Exactly. And Medicare/Medicaid directly reimburse NPs. The bureaucrats KNOW they can cut back on reimbursements. After all, the FPs may cry foul but the NPs will take it no questions asked.

Again, NPs drive down reimbursements for EVERYBODY in that field.

-Which hospital credential committee/medical staff is gonna give them hosptial privelages??

NPs have hospital admit and discharge privileges in 25 states.

-Who runs these medical staff/credentialing committees of hospitals?? you gueessed it...MD's

Hasnt stopped them from giving the keys to the kingdom over to NPs. Cost factors dictate that they allow NPs hospital access. Its a terrific way to save money.

-Which insurance company is gonna credential them for reimnbursement??

In several states, they have STATE LAWS MANDATING that NPs be listed as primary care physicans in HMO plans. NPs are listed in virtually every HMO plan in teh country as PCPs.

-Which malpractice insurance carrier is gonna credential them for coverage in this very litigious age?

Many of them do. Most NPs get malpractice coverage thru their state nursing boards. And guess what, they pay substantially less than the FP MDs yet still do the exact same work.

-How many nurses are REALISTICALLY gonna jump on that bandwagon. Remember that 95% of the nurses out there went into nursing to be a NURSE, not a doctor. If they wanted that, they would have gone to medical school.

Thats ridiculously flawed thinking. Why go to 4 years of med school, 3 years of residency, when you can quickly become an NP and do EXACTLY THE SAME STUFF AS THE MD?


SO basically, I do NOT think that FP will ever become obsolete.

They WILL become obsolete in the sense that they wont hold any advantages in scope over an NP, and their salaries will precipitously drop to be in line with the NPs.

nor do they affect my checks I get from medicare and other payors.

Yes, they do. NPs drive down reimbursements. When Medicare and Medicaid review their reimbursements across fields, they know that NPs are cheaper and that areas like FP can take further rate cuts. Why? Because the NPs will always be there to take the rate cuts, which greatly hurts docs bargaining power.
 
this has been an interesting thread with some interesting points.... the only thing i'd like to point out regarding "train-wreck" patients: i wouldn't let a NP/PA OR a FP near those patients... ESPECIALLY in the ICU setting... Yet, there are quite a few FP hospitals where FP admits their own ICU players... very concerning... but oh well...
 
Originally posted by Tenesma
this has been an interesting thread with some interesting points.... the only thing i'd like to point out regarding "train-wreck" patients: i wouldn't let a NP/PA OR a FP near those patients... ESPECIALLY in the ICU setting... Yet, there are quite a few FP hospitals where FP admits their own ICU players... very concerning... but oh well...

Tenesma,
Why would FP's admitting their own ICU players be concerning to you? I don't know what specialty you are, but you have to keep in mind, that medicine is very regional wherever you go. In all the 3 hospitals I go to (And I practice in a LARGE metropolitan area on the east coast) the FP delinieation of privelages is not much different than that of IM. Both FP and IM share the same "medicine unassigned on-call" list. Some nights it is an FP on call, other nights it is an IM on call, so there is the same chance to inherit a "train wreck". How each of us manages a train wreck is not going to be all that different...A B C's, stabilize +/- AbX (if warranted) and OBTAIN THE APPROPRIATE CONSULTS if necessary. We have a plethora of specialists that are available to help at anytime, so despite the perception, if you ask any of the specialists, IM's are just as likely to call for a consult as an FP, as neither feels the need to manage complex train wreck cases by themselves. One caveat...PLEASE don't confuse the world of residency with he world of private practice cause there can be a world of diference. PEACE!!

-Derek Sampson, MD
 
there is a big difference between an intensivist providing ICU care for a FP (as a consult) vs a FP providing intensive care... have seen it done at some big FP hospitals... makes my skin crawl...

i realize this isn't objective or based on studies, just a personal opinion
 
Originally posted by Tenesma
this has been an interesting thread with some interesting points.... the only thing i'd like to point out regarding "train-wreck" patients: i wouldn't let a NP/PA OR a FP near those patients... ESPECIALLY in the ICU setting... Yet, there are quite a few FP hospitals where FP admits their own ICU players... very concerning... but oh well...

Very little of FP MD practice is "train wreck" stuff. Maybe 10% of the FP patient pool. FP MDs will take a HUGE pay cut if the only advantage they have over NPs is this patient group.

The NPs will take over the bread and butter stuff, which accounts for 90% of the market in FP. Thats horrendously bad for MDs, and will drive down their earnings, even if they devote 100% of their practice to "train wreck" type patients.
 
Hey Mac, didn't your Mom's OBGYN recommend an AFP when he saw your nuchal translucency on US? Don't worry, there are lots of families out there wanting to adopt someone with an extra chromosome!!! :laugh:
 
Listen, this MacGyver is basing ALL arguments not on practice or experience but rather hypothetical situations and theory...he is arguing like a lawyer and NOT like a PHYSICIAN. He is not even a med student, sort of like a layperson dictating the practice of Electricians...just ZERO idea of the real world...kinda like those dip****s on that show "the apprentice"...oh yeah, they got a clue.

I chose not to read his reply, but I would like to make note regarding losing one's license.
In my residency (macgyver, that means I graduated college, graduated medical school and I am in the midst of post graduate training), we get quarterly reports on license suspensions and those that have been revoked in the state of Ohio.
Let me tell you, there are ALOT. State boards are far more strict that they used to be (an attempt to self regulate and avoid litigation or regulation by outside sources).

Guys, I really think that you should avoid the "feeding" of this troll, one who has never worked with a PA/NP or has been in practice or residency.
This young "gentleman" is troubled...lacking confidence in himself and finds refuge in making others feel bad as well.

Don't answer his questions, just offer him help. He won't listen (he certainly hasn't yet) , but keep offering.

He doesn't listen to reason and argues in circles. One of those guys that gets beat up in bars...sad.
 
Originally posted by PACtoDOC
Hey Mac, didn't your Mom's OBGYN recommend an AFP when he saw your nuchal translucency on US? Don't worry, there are lots of families out there wanting to adopt someone with an extra chromosome!!! :laugh:

what does this has to do with the fact that in your state, NPs are functionally equivalent to FP MDs?

Please give me an example of something an FP can do that an NP is barred from doing.
 
Originally posted by DocWagner
finds refuge in making others feel bad as well.

Uhh no, I'm telling you this to try and inspire you lazy ass FP MDs to stand up and actually DO SOMETHIGN ABOUT THESE NPS TAKING OVER YOUR FIELD.

apparently, you think its no big deal. And maybe in your lifetime, it wont be. But your myopic attitude that everything is OK is a short term phenomenon. Your unwillingness to see the writing on the wall and protect FP for the next generation of doctors is ridiculous. Have fun cashing out and selling your profession down the river for future generations.

If you want to shut me up, please provide a list of things that FPs can do that NPs are RESTRICTED FROM DOING. If you think I'm wrong about this, then PROVE me wrong and provide this information.
 
That line of reason simply doesn't work...

In virtually any state a MD or DO can perform and bill for Physical Therapy. 1. Does that mean they are qualified? 2. Does that mean the therapy is necessary or appropriate 3. Does that mean that a PT couldn't do a superior job?

No.

As for the State in which I practice, EVERY NP I have worked with VOLUNTARILY takes the easiest patients and defers to the resident or attending without hesitation. They avoid invasive procedures (other than sutures and typical nursing techniques).

Furthermore, NP practice is regulated typically by the hospital or group they are hired by. It simply makes no sense for hospital groups to take on the added risks of personnel that do not stand up to the gold standards. These are risks that are not weighed by cost, but rather risk management (example, many hospitals require even MD's to take a class on ABG sampling to assure QA). This is a litigious society and groups take every precaution to avoid risk...that sets standards...


First and foremost, I don't have anything to prove to a premed! Furthermore, everytime someone gives you something to chew on, it simply isn't enough. You are like talking to a wall, without reason, and without purpose. Closed ears and a heart full of misguided anger.

but if you want a list.

The ED's in which I practice
do not allow midlevels to

1. take critical patients
2. to run codes
3. to perform invasive procedures such as central lines, chest tubes, pericardiocentesis, LP's, thoracotomies, urgent deliveries, arterial lines, multiple layer suturing, complex laceration repairs
4. to run traumas
5. all care must be directed and approved by the attending
6. to handle calls on the EMS base station
7. to intubate
8. to perform RSI
9. to perform conscious sedation
10. oh God I have to quit making this list!
 
An NP cannot order and administer a cardiac stress test. An NP cannot do c-sections. An NP cannot do laparoscopic surgeries, or even simple in office surgeries like Vas', colonoscopies, endoscopies etc.... An NP cannot perform abortions legally. How about you make a list of procedures an NP can do that an FP has had to relinquish because of NP's doing them. I won't be partaking in any more Macgyver threads, so how about Freedom and Ethan (among others) follow my lead and lets just ignore this poor soul?
 
Originally posted by PACtoDOC
An NP cannot order and administer a cardiac stress test. An NP cannot do c-sections. An NP cannot do laparoscopic surgeries, or even simple in office surgeries like Vas', colonoscopies, endoscopies etc.... An NP cannot perform abortions legally. How about you make a list of procedures an NP can do that an FP has had to relinquish because of NP's doing them. I won't be partaking in any more Macgyver threads, so how about Freedom and Ethan (among others) follow my lead and lets just ignore this poor soul?

Its true that NPs cant do surgery yet... I already said that. You are wrong about the cardiac stress test though. In the "independent" practice states (25 of them) NPs can and do perform stress testing.
 
Hey mac...time to shut up.
I am done.







Have a nice day in Junior College.
 
Have a nice day waking up in 10 years and realizing you are ****ed because NPs can underbid you for the same medical care.
 
Hey Mac, have a nice day waking up 10 years from now knowing you never got accepted into college because of the President's new consanguinity law!!
 
Hi to all,

fps will never completely disappear. The tasks that we perform must evolve. Preventative care and some counseling can be provided by a none physician. I think that in the future, patients will have a larger role in their care. They may receive a notice in the mail that is time for their blood work. Another notice may tell them what to do with in terms of adjusting their treatment regimen. There are many times when a patient doesn't require a physical examination. Not eveyone needs a yearly check-up.

The role of PCPs will change. Instead of needing more we may need less in the future. This is not as crazy as it sounds.

CambieMD

p.s.
I do not care what the acamedics predict. They are usually wrong.
 
Here is my little song...

I know a little guy who lives in his parents shack...
I know a little guy who just don't know jack!
Perhaps you've heard of him, his name is baby Mac

Little Mac
He don't know as much as he thinks
Little Mac
His ability to listen sure does Stink(s)

OHHHHOHHHHHH
Little mac
OHHHHOHHHHHH
Little mac

I know a little guy who sits in Junior college
I know a little guy others wisdom he don't acknowlege

Little Mac
He is a paranoid little brat
OOOOH little MAc
He needs some HALDOL STAT!
 
2 plus pages still no credentials.... O.K., I'll be the first to say it. Mac enjoy your life as a PA or NP or what ever it is you aspire to be (lawyer). Its no wounder you didn't, can't or won't get into medical school. 😉
 
mac isn't bright enough to get into pa school either.....he probably is still aiming for asst. janitorial tech
 
Now I know what Freedom was doing all those years while his PT tech was doing all the work!! WRITING SONGS FOR P. DiDDY!! You are too funny Freeedom! Hope EM is treating you well. How does it feel to be human in year PGY2?

Hey Mac, if you will give your credentials, and post some sort of proof that we can all agree is real, I will buy you dinner (but you must go without me sorry!!) at your local favorite hang out, plus a couple of beers (to help you relax).

Your turn!!:clap:
 
This thread has unfortunately degenerated into a mud slinging contest.

It'd probably be more useful to comment mainly on the issues, instead of the mental deficiencies of the original poster.

A lot of what the OP says about the encroachment of "physician extenders" into practice areas which were once the sole purview of FPs/MDs is probably somewhat true, though he gives us an exaggerated view of the issues.

There are many reasons for the problem: the declining number of med students, the declining numbers of med students going into FP, the corresponding shortage of FPs in rural areas (and some urban areas), etc.

The whole picture is likely far more complex than is made out here, with all sorts of politico-economic and social factors coming into play.

What is important is deciding what training is required for an individual to practice primary care medicine( Is MD level training required? residency? nursing level training?) Both scope and training needs have to be configured to ensure safe medical practice for patients.

The whole issue will be complicated by the problem of financing medicine in America in the coming decades, with a lot of decisions being made in the interests of money, and its greedy masters.
 
Hi Neuron,

I agree with what you have said. The practice of medicine in this country is changing rapidly. I think that as the complexity and degree of specialization in medicine increases, physicians will be pressed into dealing with more complex issues and less fluff.
It may take a while but the training that residents receive must come in line with the actual practice of medicine. Patients are livivng longer with many medical problems. Why train docs to practice in the wilderness when most of us live and practice in the burbs.

Our training must outstrip that of the midlevel providers. More wards and less loooking over someones shoulder. More complex medical issues and less behavioral science. I am not saying increase the length of training. OB should probably be dropped from the curriculum. Those who want to deliver babies should complete an ob/gyn residency.

The name calling is very counter productive. This is a forum for the exchange of ideas. I do not care who Mac is. He/she has raised some good points and given us all something to talk about. Read the AMA News, Medical Economics and your local newspaper. You will begin to understand that medicine is in big trouble. The costs of care continues to rise at an alarming rate. More of our gnp goes for healthcare than almost all of the other developed countries out there. This simply can't continue.

I am late for work now.

CambieMD

p.s.
Do not believe that this country could afford to insure eveyone, equally.
 
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