FlamingFahad
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As non patient “owning” specialists, what are some entrepreneurial opportunities specific for anesthesiologists?
As non patient “owning” specialists, what are some entrepreneurial opportunities specific for anesthesiologists?
interesting to know what kind of set up they have, monitoring, equipment, and depth of sedation.In my area, there’s been a huge proliferation of anesthesiologist-owned mobile dental sedation practices. The dentist pays you cash by the hour (from the massive pile of cash they collect from the patient) for generally safe procedures. If you scale up, this probably qualifies as exploitation of your fellow physicians.
The good ones bring a machine and will do full GETA if needed. A dentist friend who uses these companies actually loves GETA for big cases since he doesn’t have to deal with a moving, swallowing patient, but the anesthesiologists he works with prefer MAC (less work/BP/airway issues).interesting to know what kind of set up they have, monitoring, equipment, and depth of sedation.
reminded of that thread about all those dental sedation deaths.
The good ones bring a machine and will do full GETA if needed. A dentist friend who uses these companies actually loves GETA for big cases since he doesn’t have to deal with a moving, swallowing patient, but the anesthesiologists he works with prefer MAC (less work/BP/airway issues).
Exploitation of your fellow physicians.
doing GA would necessitate appropriate recovery resources as well...The good ones bring a machine and will do full GETA if needed. A dentist friend who uses these companies actually loves GETA for big cases since he doesn’t have to deal with a moving, swallowing patient, but the anesthesiologists he works with prefer MAC (less work/BP/airway issues).
This is the way. Pain seems to not have a ceiling if you scale with ancillary services in a multispecialty group. (Adjoined PT/OT, Imaging center, lab/drug screen/cash based regen medicine). Skip the inhouse pharmacy to avoid drug addicts breaking in.Open a pain management/growth hormone/Botox... "medical spa"
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣I really like a thread like this.
Be a pain doc,
Obtain an anesthesia contract to a rural hospital for some variable X, come on SDN and and try to indirectly hire two docs for 1/3X taking Q weekly call with “26 weeks vacation”
Pocket 1/3x without lifting a finger.
When no one inquires about the job, act like you don’t understand how one FTE job is worth at least 1/2X.
Try pitching a low overnight volume and light OB.
Still no bite, now claim the pay is worth 2/5X.
Get called out again.
Complain to the SDN moderator about your job ad getting too much hate for such a low amount of work and have it removed.
But yeah, exploitation of your fellow physicians seems to be the predominant way of making money if you can stomach it. I cant.
Open a pain management/growth hormone/Botox... "medical spa"
You talkin about doc jarrett? idk if he truly quit entirely. But its not sustainable to only do botox in a city that is filled with some of the best plastic surgeons.Instagram doc quit anesthesia and does injections in Miami after a year of practice. How much do you think he makes ?
Instagram doc quit anesthesia and does injections in Miami after a year of practice. How much do you think he makes ?
I think he quit entirely…You talkin about doc jarrett? idk if he truly quit entirely. But its not sustainable to only do botox in a city that is filled with some of the best plastic surgeons.
No one quits medicine entirely that quickly. Theres more to the story, methinks.I think he quit entirely…
Oh yes I know that story as well. Maybe there is who knows but he didn’t seem like the kinda guy who was super passionate about anesthesia to begin withNo one quits medicine entirely that quickly. Theres more to the story, methinks.
Similar to the other doc he hangs out with that got kicked out of residency for making distasteful posts, but still advertises himself as a physician conveniently leaving that tidbit out.
Is pain still lucrative ? Is chronic pain practice worth it?Be a pain doc,
Implants cost $1000-5000 per tooth, potentially over $50k for a full set - IN CASH! Granted there's a lot of overhead, including anesthesia. My guess is the sedation company gets whatever it can negotiate, in this market well over $300/hr with a minimum guarantee. But those secrets are proprietary.How much does it really pay, especially cash?
Implants cost $1000-5000 per tooth, potentially over $50k for a full set - IN CASH! Granted there's a lot of overhead, including anesthesia. My guess is the sedation company gets whatever it can negotiate, in this market well over $300/hr with a minimum guarantee. But those secrets are proprietary.
No one quits medicine entirely that quickly. Theres more to the story, methinks.
Similar to the other doc he hangs out with that got kicked out of residency for making distasteful posts, but still advertises himself as a physician conveniently leaving that tidbit out.
Is pain still lucrative ? Is chronic pain practice worth it?
Care to elaborate?Absolutely
Yeah how much we talking?Absolutely
How do these solo physicians get these contracts? Y’all are making it sound like it’s quite a bit that this is happening.How much does it really pay, especially cash?
Getting a contract for 1.5M, then employee two physicians for a total of 750K. Pocket the 750k comes to mind.
It’s easy call, and you’re getting 26 weeks of vacation. You can totally take home call, the call back rate is like only 5%.
Most definitely still worth it.Is pain still lucrative ? Is chronic pain practice worth it?
How do these solo physicians get these contracts? Y’all are making it sound like it’s quite a bit that this is happening.
As a doc who practes both pain and anesthesia, I would disagree. Falling reimbursement, lots of paperwork, procedure denials, difficult patients and a lot of literature showing small or marginal benefits of most procedures.Most definitely still worth it.
Are you performing si fusions? MILD? Permanent implants? Minuteman? Vertiflex? If not that may be your problem. Otherwise its definitely profitable.As a doc who practes both pain and anesthesia, I would disagree. Falling reimbursement, lots of paperwork, procedure denials, difficult patients and a lot of literature showing small or marginal benefits of most procedures.
Cms is proposing over a 10% cut on reimbursement for 2023 across the board in pain management.
Are you performing si fusions? MILD? Permanent implants? Minuteman? Vertiflex? If not that may be your problem. Otherwise its definitely profitable.
Absolutely. MILD pts come back clickin their heels. RFA’s can achieve excellent results. I dont understand why anesthesiologists think pain doctors are all crackpots.
Are you performing si fusions? MILD? Permanent implants? Minuteman? Vertiflex? If not that may be your problem. Otherwise its definitely profitable.
Late to reply:
money wise, here you go, from the pain forum :
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What's Your Plan for After the Medicare Cuts?
Does anyone think that the D's will come to the rescue?forums.studentdoctor.net
Next addressing the scope of pain management, the American Association of Neurological Surgeons came out with a position statement regarding spine instrumentation by non-neurosurgeons and non-orthopedic surgeons in response to pain docs doing increasingly more invasive spine procedures.
The AANS, the CNS and AANS/CNS Joint Section on Disorders of the Spine and Peripheral Nerves recently adopted a new position statement titled “Arthrodesis of the Spine by the Non-Spine Surgeon.” Increasingly, non-surgeon spine practitioners are performing interventional services, such as percutaneous instrumentation, without the requisite training or ability to handle complications. The neurosurgical groups believe optimal and safe patient care occurs when neurosurgeons and orthopaedic surgeons — trained in the full spectrum of spinal biomechanics, including instrumentation and fusion techniques — manage surgical diseases affecting the spine."
I did a pain fellowship at a heavily interventional program, arguably the top-tier program in that state. Regarding SI fusions and MILD, I don't believe we have any business doing fusions or shaving down the ligamentum flavum after a year of fellowship training. I concede that this is a controversial point in the pain world but the other side has a vested financial interest in pushing the scope of what a pain physician can do. Likely ups the medicolegal stakes if the above position statements are presented in a court post complication and no shortage of NS and ortho guys happy to testify that they view this as inappropriate. One shouldn't perform a procedure in which you cannot deal with a foreseeable complication.
my 2 cents
Late to reply:
money wise, here you go, from the pain forum :
Next addressing the scope of pain management, the American Association of Neurological Surgeons came out with a position statement regarding spine instrumentation by non-neurosurgeons and non-orthopedic surgeons in response to pain docs doing increasingly more invasive spine procedures.
The AANS, the CNS and AANS/CNS Joint Section on Disorders of the Spine and Peripheral Nerves recently adopted a new position statement titled “Arthrodesis of the Spine by the Non-Spine Surgeon.” Increasingly, non-surgeon spine practitioners are performing interventional services, such as percutaneous instrumentation, without the requisite training or ability to handle complications. The neurosurgical groups believe optimal and safe patient care occurs when neurosurgeons and orthopaedic surgeons — trained in the full spectrum of spinal biomechanics, including instrumentation and fusion techniques — manage surgical diseases affecting the spine."
That's why I don't do any central lines or blocks. Because I can't do a cutdown or place a chest tube to deal with my foreseeable complications.
Yeah except a bunch of interventionalists (IR, cardiology, pulm, etc) do all sorts of things that require surgeon backup.One shouldn't perform a procedure in which you cannot deal with a foreseeable complication.
What about kyphoplasties?The procedures you mention does not irrevocably alter the anatomy to a significant degree nor would anyone raise an eyebrow to an anesthesiologist placing invasive lines or blocks. No one could reasonably allege that such activities falls outside the established scope of practice. Also, you probably can name reasonable indications to supports why you specifically placed such lines or nerve blocks.
If you placing screws through a joint or shaving paraneural structures, you are facing multiple surgical society's position statements stating that you shouldn't. A smart lawyer could argue the indication may be sound but did the patient really exhaust all other nonsurgical options, and then a spine surgeon decided they are not a surgical candidate? Rock and a hard place.
Apples to oranges
it's raising eyebrows because it's new. in a few years, it'll be fine.
It can be done as long as you don’t cancel the case for a K+ of 5.7.We have a pm&r guys who would do them…. Still don’t “feel” right. One year of fellowship and “operating” on my spine……. No thank you.
The procedures you mention does not irrevocably alter the anatomy to a significant degree nor would anyone raise an eyebrow to an anesthesiologist placing invasive lines or blocks. No one could reasonably allege that such activities falls outside the established scope of practice. Also, you probably can name reasonable indications to supports why you specifically placed such lines or nerve blocks.
If you placing screws through a joint or shaving paraneural structures, you are facing multiple surgical society's position statements stating that you shouldn't. A smart lawyer could argue the indication may be sound but did the patient really exhaust all other nonsurgical options, and then a spine surgeon decided they are not a surgical candidate? Rock and a hard place.
Apples to oranges
"Multiple surgical society's position statements stating that you shouldn't". And the CRNA societies say they should have independent practice. It's almost like societies are full of **** and make statements saying things that benefit them are good things.
Except asa and ama.
Part of the arguments is the lack of knowledge and/or experience with CRNAs. I would hope most physicians have a little more self-awareness.