Is there a place here for the 250-300k club?

This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.

The JockDoc

lighting up the court
20+ Year Member
Joined
Nov 16, 2003
Messages
310
Reaction score
10
Hey all,

Im an MS2 who is really thinking about doing a PMR residency. My problem is that I will have a huge debt load from med school - in the range of 240k to 290k (after interest through residency). I'd like to think that regardless of what residency I pick, I could find a way to pay off my bills, but I wanted to know if anyone else had a perspective on this within PMR. I know that there are programs in family medicine or even surgery that will either offer debt repayment plans, or at least access to a decent salary that can cover the loan bills. I haven't heard much about this in PM&R though. Any input?

Thanks.

Members don't see this ad.
 
Yes there is. I don't know what your situation was to get that far in the hole, but there are residencies which offer a very affordable cost of living (Texas and Ohio residencies for example).
You will be making 150 + per year (as an average). You will have to practice fiscal responsibility for the first 10 years of practice to pay off loans, and then you will be working towards retirement.
Your income will afford you to have that type of debt, but you probably won't have the 700,000 dollar house and 60,000 dollar cars as early as you would like.
Of course there are fields which pay more (some internal med specialties, surgery and their specialties, anaesthesia) but when weighing salary with the ever Elusive Quality of life, PM&R is at the top. You can work 100 hours per week, or you can work 35 hours per week. Your salary will vary based on the intensity of your practice.
 
Yes there is. I don't know what your situation was to get that far in the hole, but there are residencies which offer a very affordable cost of living (Texas and Ohio residencies for example).
You will be making 150 + per year (as an average). You will have to practice fiscal responsibility for the first 10 years of practice to pay off loans, and then you will be working towards retirement.
Your income will afford you to have that type of debt, but you probably won't have the 700,000 dollar house and 60,000 dollar cars as early as you would like.
Of course there are fields which pay more (some internal med specialties, surgery and their specialties, anaesthesia) but when weighing salary with the ever Elusive Quality of life, PM&R is at the top. You can work 100 hours per week, or you can work 35 hours per week. Your salary will vary based on the intensity of your practice.

Oddly enough, the only situation that that put me here is medical school itself. I have $0 combined undergrad, credit, you name it other kinds debt. The rest of the 250k is medical school (40k tuition +16k living a year and rising 😡).

One of the things that attracted me to PM&R, like you were saying, is the quality of life. I'm also particularly interested in sports medicine, and this field seems to be a good combination of the two, without being family medicine, which I can't see myself doing.
 
Members don't see this ad :)
I didn't mean to imply that it was your fault solely.
I was thinking more along the lines of undergrad loans, family obligations, etc.

Texas med school tuition is 13,000. I've learned how fortunate we Texans are.
 
Hi The JockDoc,

I too went to PSU and I too have as much debt. I think you have to think of your debt almost like a mortgage. Your student loan interest is tax deductible and a lot of your payment can be deferred while in residency. (although if you can, you should at least try to pay for the interest).

I am not worried about being able to pay off my loans. I also do not care about living in a mansion or driving a fancy car. I want enough to be able to travel, pay for my future children, retire comfortably, and help my mother. As long as you're not stupid with your money - which I'm sure you're not since you don't have any credit card debt - you will be fine.

BTW - there are two PSU grads at RIC - pm me if you want more info.
 
Wow this post is well timed. I've been reviewing my finances quite a bit lately. I'm pretty concerned about "making ends meat" during residency. Does anyone have any info about good loans offered to residents? Any info would be much appreciated.
 
If you try and "live like a doctor" in residency then you will certainly increase your debt. Even with a reasonable lifestyle in residency you might find it hard to not slip into a little more debt.

Find something you enjoy to do. It's much easier to see patients and practice medicine that you like then to make piles of cash and be miserable.
 
I just finished paying off the last of my student loan debt in 2007, finished residency in 1999. I borrowed about $70K, which grew to $100K during residency. Payments were about $1800/month.

$150K/year salary (really less than 50th %ile for PM&R anymore) = $12,500/ mo, $8,500 after taxes. $250K debt probably has around $4500 - $5000/mo payments - that's some serious debt! Need a spouse who can bring home some significant cake to offset that.

I heard of some programs/hospitals providing student loan debt payoff after residency, but it usually required several years of indentured servitude.

One thing to consider for student loan debt - if you can build up home equity, use a Home Equity Loan to pay off the student loans - that shifts the interest to tax deductible (at MD salaries, it usually is not tax-deductable). Also, should you ever have to go bankrupt (god forbid), student loans are not dischargeable usually, while HEL debt is.

I never built up enough equity to do this, but in 2006, one of my credit card companies offered me 4.9% balance transfer for the life of the balance, and took the remainder of my loans onto this. I couldn't deduct the interest anyway, it loered my interest rate on them, and then it became dischargable, if I should have needed to do so (but didn't). Also, in this scenario, you could potentially take a lot longer to pay off the loans by paying less of the principle per month, (lower monthly payments) but you'll pay more in the end.
 
My debt is around 200K. I'm in my last year of residency and will begin repayment next year. I locked in at 2.8% interest so I figure I should extend it out to a 30 year deal. My payments are only 870/mnth and I can make more money in a money market or a safe mutual fund. Why repay so quickly with these low interest rates?
 
Thanks for the replies guys.

Myofascist - You're lucky that you lived in the time of the 2.8% interest rate, and you're doing the right thing by taking your time to pay it off. They charge you 6.8 and 8.5% nowadays at med skool. In that case it would make sense to pay them off as quickly as possible because there aren't any guaranteed investments that will beat those percentages.

PMR - I haven't heard of paying it off through a home equity loan before. I don't much about those, but it sounds better for bankruptcy, as you said.

Axm - I'll send you a pm.

I just did a quick google search for loan repayment plans, and there are some physiatry positions that offer them. It looks like the average repayment is ~20-30k/year, which is good. I'm not sure what the difference between that and just a higher salary is though. Maybe the loan repayment is tax advantaged?

I don't need to live an extravagant lifestyle and I would only be interested in a specialty because I enjoy doing it. I just want to set myself up with a solid financial base. If I pay back 5k a month for loans and assume, as PMR did, that i'll take home 8.5k a month, theres basically a resident's salary left over. That isn't much to invest in retirement, house, etc.
 
I just finished paying off the last of my student loan debt in 2007, finished residency in 1999. I borrowed about $70K, which grew to $100K during residency. Payments were about $1800/month.

$150K/year salary (really less than 50th %ile for PM&R anymore) = $12,500/ mo, $8,500 after taxes. $250K debt probably has around $4500 - $5000/mo payments - that's some serious debt! Need a spouse who can bring home some significant cake to offset that.
.


Completely innaccurate numbers.
My debt is above $250K and montly payments are about $1850/month. Not quite sure where you got those numbers from.

Any home owner that is heavily mortgaged will confirm this.

I find so many people scaring underclassmen on these boards. There are enough truths which are scary enough, why not pick one of those?
 
thanks to my chiropractic loans, i too am in the 250+ club.
here's a loan calculator result i found on finaid.org.
$300,000 with 8% (my med school loans are private) for 10yr term

Loan Balance: $300,000.00
Adjusted Loan Balance: $300,000.00
Loan Interest Rate: 8.00%
Loan Fees: 0.00%
Loan Term: 10 years
Monthly Loan Payment: $3,639.83
Number of Payments: 120
Cumulative Payments: $436,779.20
Total Interest Paid: $136,779.20
-----------------------------------------------------------------

and that's with a 10yr loan term. here's the results for a 30yr loan.
Loan Balance: $300,000.00
Adjusted Loan Balance: $300,000.00
Loan Interest Rate: 8.00%
Loan Fees: 0.00%
Loan Term: 30 years
Minimum Payment: $50.00
Monthly Loan Payment: $2,201.29
Number of Payments: 361
Cumulative Payments: $792,469.98
Total Interest Paid: $492,469.98 YIKES!!!!!!!!
 
Completely innaccurate numbers.
My debt is above $250K and montly payments are about $1850/month. Not quite sure where you got those numbers from.

Any home owner that is heavily mortgaged will confirm this.

I find so many people scaring underclassmen on these boards. There are enough truths which are scary enough, why not pick one of those?

Sure, mortgage over 30 years, payments are smaller. Maybe your interest rates are a little lower.

$250,000 @ 0% interest for 10 years = $2083/mo. So unless they are paying you interest, you are FOS.
 
Members don't see this ad :)
This is what you posted up top:
$250K debt probably has around $4500 - $5000/mo payments

Than you posted this...which is a much closer number but still higher than what I pay:

$250,000 @ 0% interest for 10 years = $2083/mo. So unless they are paying you interest, you are FOS.

Easy Killer! Those are some large and intimidating numbers to those who are easily scared.

This is what I say to that in Dwight Shrute voice..... "False"

Here is what I pay:

TERI LOANS: (Private) $200K, 8.25 interest rate $1350/month
STAFFORDS: (Gov't) $100K, 1.75% Interest rate $350/month.

Also, when you say:

"Sure, mortgage over 30 years, payments are smaller."

How many years do you think the standard loan repayment term is for?
I am pretty sure it is 30 years as well.

Beets, Bears...battlestar Gallactica!
 
Here is what I pay:

TERI LOANS: (Private) $200K, 8.25 interest rate $1350/month
STAFFORDS: (Gov't) $100K, 1.75% Interest rate $350/month.

You pay that on a resident's salary???? Oy.
 
JockDoc,

I feel for you. I'm paying instate rates and will still be amassing around $160k + 6.8% interest by the time I graduate. On the bright side, I know a resident who's about to finish and has received a couple of offers already making $200k/year or more if he's willing to do outpatient pain medicine, even without a fellowship. So there are more lucrative positions available, especially if you're interested in working outpatient, in smaller communities, in the South, etc. And I know of another guy who's moonlighting on the side and making good money, so it's possible to work on your loans during residency, especially given the relatively limited hours PM&R programs often expect of their residents. Still sucks though.

-Pyroclast
 
JockDoc,

I feel for you. I'm paying instate rates and will still be amassing around $160k + 6.8% interest by the time I graduate. On the bright side, I know a resident who's about to finish and has received a couple of offers already making $200k/year or more if he's willing to do outpatient pain medicine, even without a fellowship. So there are more lucrative positions available, especially if you're interested in working outpatient, in smaller communities, in the South, etc. And I know of another guy who's moonlighting on the side and making good money, so it's possible to work on your loans during residency, especially given the relatively limited hours PM&R programs often expect of their residents. Still sucks though.

-Pyroclast
You want to be VERY careful that "outpatient pain medicine" does not equate to a pill mill, which, while lucrative, may cause you to run afoul of the authorities.
 
You want to be VERY careful that "outpatient pain medicine" does not equate to a pill mill, which, while lucrative, may cause you to run afoul of the authorities.

From what I've heard talking to soon-to-be-graduating residents, it sounds like $200k isn't unreasonable for outpatient PM&R, even just starting out. Even $400k/year isn't unheard of if you're willing to do primarily pain procedures in a rural underserved area in the South, even without fellowship training.

Not to sound naive, but I genuinely can't understand why people end up putting all the hard work they've done at risk to pad their salary by running a pill mill. My own growing student debt freaks me out, but I know I'll be making enough to pay it off and live comfortably no matter what I end up doing. And it always seems to be outpatient docs doing it. The academic/inpatient pain doctors making half as much either don't succumb to the temptation very often, or are a lot better at not getting caught.
 
I think you have to think of your debt almost like a mortgage. Your student loan interest is tax deductible

It's important to note that student loan interest is NOT tax deductible as soon as residency ends and your salary kicks in. The income limit to get that deduction is $65,000 for a single filer or $135,000 for joint filers.
 
You can deduct up to $2,500 a year in student loan interest. You can roll your loans into a home loan or some even get business "capital" loans and pay off a portion of their loan as a business expense. This way isn't on the "up and up", but the IRS rules don't say what you have to spend your business capital loan on.

I think PMRMSK was on a 10 year repayment. I had $170,000 in loans, 100K in federal loans and 70K in private (the privates was only 53K, but the 70K was interest by the time I started to pay). I deferred mine for 2 years (not a good idea) and my private loan costed me $495 a month on the 30 year plan (175K by the end). My 70K in private cost me $1550 a month, since they would only go 10 years and the interest was higher.. If you do the numbers.. that 52K would have cost me around 185K. I bucked up and paid it all off (the private) in one year by not going on vacations, selling my high dollar cars and not spending money on stupid things. I kept my federal since they are easier to work with and I am just adding more by being in med school. So.. between my MBA and my MD, I will add around $250K to the $100K I already have, with interest.. so I will easily be around the $400K mark. However.. I am not worried about it, been there, done that. This debt is not bad when you figure you should make at LEAST 200K every year, for as long as you want to work.. so even if you ONLY work 25 years, that is $5 Million over a lifetime.. not a bad return if you ask me.
 
You can deduct up to $2,500 a year in student loan interest. You can roll your loans into a home loan or some even get business "capital" loans and pay off a portion of their loan as a business expense. This way isn't on the "up and up", but the IRS rules don't say what you have to spend your business capital loan on.

I think PMRMSK was on a 10 year repayment. I had $170,000 in loans, 100K in federal loans and 70K in private (the privates was only 53K, but the 70K was interest by the time I started to pay). I deferred mine for 2 years (not a good idea) and my private loan costed me $495 a month on the 30 year plan (175K by the end). My 70K in private cost me $1550 a month, since they would only go 10 years and the interest was higher.. If you do the numbers.. that 52K would have cost me around 185K. I bucked up and paid it all off (the private) in one year by not going on vacations, selling my high dollar cars and not spending money on stupid things. I kept my federal since they are easier to work with and I am just adding more by being in med school. So.. between my MBA and my MD, I will add around $250K to the $100K I already have, with interest.. so I will easily be around the $400K mark. However.. I am not worried about it, been there, done that. This debt is not bad when you figure you should make at LEAST 200K every year, for as long as you want to work.. so even if you ONLY work 25 years, that is $5 Million over a lifetime.. not a bad return if you ask me.


hang on there, buckaroo. depending on where you are, i wouldnt be counting on 200K+ straight out of residency without a fellowship. a surprising number of people i know do not start at that number, especially in the northeast
 
Well.. any physician that is accepting a job making chump change, deserves what they get. I met a guy recently that got out of his ortho residency.. did a fellowship in computer aided hip replacements. He took a job for $225K a year for 2 years, $250K a year for 2 years and his final year for $300K, of a FIVE year contract. What an idiot. He should do some simple math and see it would not take many surgeries and/or office visits to generate 3 times this gross income and they now work him like a dog, of course. Most people coming out of medical school are scared of the real world and have no idea what they should be making or how to negotiate a contract. I have realized it would be easier to just hire doctors and let them work for me than to go to medical school...(which I did as a chiro) IF I was in this for the money.. which I am not. I had 3 MDs work for me, 2 trained in FM, one in IM. The both worked for peanuts and where happy to get the $100/hr I paid them, while they were making my office $500-700/hr and they had most of the liability.The main reason new doctors make less.. is because they will take less, not because they can't do the work.

Take some time away from your med books and go to a few business seminars or take some healthcare business related questions. Just because you are fresh out of residency, doesn't mean you shouldn't be getting paid well for what you do.

Don't attack me or slam me for my opinion on this.. please don't say everyone has to pay their dues, etc.. you do.. by 8 years of school and at least another 4 in residency. We all should be smarter coming out of residency and should ensure you are paid what you are worth. Heck.. even hair stylist, estheticians, massage therapist and others..get paid at least 50% of what they produce. Why are physicians happy with getting paid 25%, if that.. of what we produce?
 
Well.. any physician that is accepting a job making chump change, deserves what they get. I met a guy recently that got out of his ortho residency.. did a fellowship in computer aided hip replacements. He took a job for $225K a year for 2 years, $250K a year for 2 years and his final year for $300K, of a FIVE year contract. What an idiot. He should do some simple math and see it would not take many surgeries and/or office visits to generate 3 times this gross income and they now work him like a dog, of course. Most people coming out of medical school are scared of the real world and have no idea what they should be making or how to negotiate a contract. I have realized it would be easier to just hire doctors and let them work for me than to go to medical school...(which I did as a chiro) IF I was in this for the money.. which I am not. I had 3 MDs work for me, 2 trained in FM, one in IM. The both worked for peanuts and where happy to get the $100/hr I paid them, while they were making my office $500-700/hr and they had most of the liability.The main reason new doctors make less.. is because they will take less, not because they can't do the work.

Take some time away from your med books and go to a few business seminars or take some healthcare business related questions. Just because you are fresh out of residency, doesn't mean you shouldn't be getting paid well for what you do.

Don't attack me or slam me for my opinion on this.. please don't say everyone has to pay their dues, etc.. you do.. by 8 years of school and at least another 4 in residency. We all should be smarter coming out of residency and should ensure you are paid what you are worth. Heck.. even hair stylist, estheticians, massage therapist and others..get paid at least 50% of what they produce. Why are physicians happy with getting paid 25%, if that.. of what we produce?

I'm beginning to agree with this.

Since my original post I've talked with a few docs who know their a ss from their olecranon about business and they seem to agree that contract negotiations are key to getting what you want. In a few hours time you can make tens of thousands more a year with good negotiation skills, whereas relying on your credentials alone may take you extra years to generate the same income automatically.

I think that its because it's a skill not often practiced by med students. We're taught to take what we're given and not complain - no matter how bad it is - throughout our training. In fact, we're usually rewarded to do what other people tell us to do. As soon as the doors open to the real world, its a culture shock because we're still thinking the same way.

Spending a few dollars on books and a few hours talking to people who've been through will probably give me at least some tools on how to deal with the debt when its time.
 
Well.. any physician that is accepting a job making chump change, deserves what they get. I met a guy recently that got out of his ortho residency.. did a fellowship in computer aided hip replacements. He took a job for $225K a year for 2 years, $250K a year for 2 years and his final year for $300K, of a FIVE year contract. What an idiot. He should do some simple math and see it would not take many surgeries and/or office visits to generate 3 times this gross income and they now work him like a dog, of course. Most people coming out of medical school are scared of the real world and have no idea what they should be making or how to negotiate a contract. I have realized it would be easier to just hire doctors and let them work for me than to go to medical school...(which I did as a chiro) IF I was in this for the money.. which I am not. I had 3 MDs work for me, 2 trained in FM, one in IM. The both worked for peanuts and where happy to get the $100/hr I paid them, while they were making my office $500-700/hr and they had most of the liability.The main reason new doctors make less.. is because they will take less, not because they can't do the work.

Take some time away from your med books and go to a few business seminars or take some healthcare business related questions. Just because you are fresh out of residency, doesn't mean you shouldn't be getting paid well for what you do.

Don't attack me or slam me for my opinion on this.. please don't say everyone has to pay their dues, etc.. you do.. by 8 years of school and at least another 4 in residency. We all should be smarter coming out of residency and should ensure you are paid what you are worth. Heck.. even hair stylist, estheticians, massage therapist and others..get paid at least 50% of what they produce. Why are physicians happy with getting paid 25%, if that.. of what we produce?


i agree that docs are not as business savvy as we should be and that we often settle for less than we are worth. what i AM saying is that if you finish residency and expect to be handed a 200K/year deal in the northeast, you are fooling yourself. you and your "savvy negotiating" will only take you so far. typically, you are negotiating with partners or business managers who have way more insight and data as to how their practice runs and will be looking for as much work out of you with as little compensation as possible. that is money directly out of their pockets and they will try to hold on to it as tightly as possible. if both sides are smart, a fair production/incentive based contract is the way to go, where both sides win. you seem to think that most of the jobs are strictly salary based, which they are not.

also, if you want to set up shop yourself, again, go right ahead. go ahead and get ANOTHER loan for equipment, set up costs, staff, etc. not to mention all of the administrative work. i may be looking into this in a few years, but thats a big pill to swallow right away.
 
One thing non one mentioned is that alot of it has to do with the market value for your services within a particular geographic region or city even.

In big cities with alot of specialists, the flow of referrals is controlled by community "networks", even suburb to suburb, and breaking in can be tough if you don't have the reputation and contacts of your "group" to help you get started.
 
SSDOC33..

I completely agree with you. If you into a saturated market where your services are not needed, you won't get a good contract. I see you were talking about the NE of the US, and I don't know much about that area. I am from the SE and I know I would laugh my way out of a job if they offered me less than $250K, right out of residency. Now.. this wouldn't have to be a set salary, it could be incentive based where I have the opportunity to make this or more.

I know pain management physicians, some PMR, some anesthesia, who are doing pain ALONE.. nothing else.. and are making over $2 MILLION working 4 days a week, with a 6 week wait to get in to see them. I am sure there are a lot who are working inpatient rehab for less.. but dang.. I know PTs that work in facilities making close to $200K.

I was a chiro for 7 years.. a CHIRO.. and I made just under $500K a year working 3 days a week in my own office. This was around $250-350K NET, depending on my overhead and expenses. You can't tell me that a PMR doc can't meet, or should exceed this? This was in a small county of only 70,000 people with 8 other chiros.

I guess the lesson is that you have to really decide on where to practice based on the market demand of your services. I don't see there being any reason a PMR doc can't see at least 10 pts a day.. that would be SLOW.. and there is no reason they shouldn't average at least $150 a visit (including injections, EMG/NCV, physicals, follow up, etc). This gives you around a $400K a year income. Even at just $100 a visit, that is $260K. I could see a facility paying you $200K, IF.. they are only giving you 50 pts a week..but if you are doing more than that.. you need to do the math and ask for more money..

Maybe we should get A-Rod's attorney to get our contracts..LOL
 
I don't see there being any reason a PMR doc can't see at least 10 pts a day.. that would be SLOW.. and there is no reason they shouldn't average at least $150 a visit (including injections, EMG/NCV, physicals, follow up, etc). This gives you around a $400K a year income.
150/pt x 10pts/day x 50 wks/yr = $350k, not 400

That is gross income, not net. Assuming 50% overhead, that means your net based on the volume you quoted is $175K, not 400.

The first day you show up for work you will not have a full schedule. But to asses your numbers, let's assume you do have 10 patients your first day.

The insurance companies will take, on average, 3 months to pay you for the work you do, so the first 12 months you work, your net collections will be ~$130k, not 400.

The group you join will have put out money to bring you onboard. They expect a return on their investment, in most cases, and so you will likely get to keep only 50% of your net collections the first year or two. So your share of the net collections is only ~$65k the first year.

So in order to make the $250k you were making previously, you will need to see 40 patients a day 5 days a week your first year.
 
SSDOC33..

I completely agree with you. If you into a saturated market where your services are not needed, you won't get a good contract. I see you were talking about the NE of the US, and I don't know much about that area. I am from the SE and I know I would laugh my way out of a job if they offered me less than $250K, right out of residency. Now.. this wouldn't have to be a set salary, it could be incentive based where I have the opportunity to make this or more.

I know pain management physicians, some PMR, some anesthesia, who are doing pain ALONE.. nothing else.. and are making over $2 MILLION working 4 days a week, with a 6 week wait to get in to see them. I am sure there are a lot who are working inpatient rehab for less.. but dang.. I know PTs that work in facilities making close to $200K.

I was a chiro for 7 years.. a CHIRO.. and I made just under $500K a year working 3 days a week in my own office. This was around $250-350K NET, depending on my overhead and expenses. You can't tell me that a PMR doc can't meet, or should exceed this? This was in a small county of only 70,000 people with 8 other chiros.

I guess the lesson is that you have to really decide on where to practice based on the market demand of your services. I don't see there being any reason a PMR doc can't see at least 10 pts a day.. that would be SLOW.. and there is no reason they shouldn't average at least $150 a visit (including injections, EMG/NCV, physicals, follow up, etc). This gives you around a $400K a year income. Even at just $100 a visit, that is $260K. I could see a facility paying you $200K, IF.. they are only giving you 50 pts a week..but if you are doing more than that.. you need to do the math and ask for more money..

Maybe we should get A-Rod's attorney to get our contracts..LOL



Why would anyone making 250-350,000 a year, working 3 days a week, EVER do anything else? (unless there is more to the story) Why would you put yourself through the "pain" of medical school, residency, etc.

Wow.
 
SSDOC33..

I completely agree with you. If you into a saturated market where your services are not needed, you won't get a good contract. I see you were talking about the NE of the US, and I don't know much about that area. I am from the SE and I know I would laugh my way out of a job if they offered me less than $250K, right out of residency. Now.. this wouldn't have to be a set salary, it could be incentive based where I have the opportunity to make this or more.

I know pain management physicians, some PMR, some anesthesia, who are doing pain ALONE.. nothing else.. and are making over $2 MILLION working 4 days a week, with a 6 week wait to get in to see them. I am sure there are a lot who are working inpatient rehab for less.. but dang.. I know PTs that work in facilities making close to $200K.

I was a chiro for 7 years.. a CHIRO.. and I made just under $500K a year working 3 days a week in my own office. This was around $250-350K NET, depending on my overhead and expenses. You can't tell me that a PMR doc can't meet, or should exceed this? This was in a small county of only 70,000 people with 8 other chiros.

I guess the lesson is that you have to really decide on where to practice based on the market demand of your services. I don't see there being any reason a PMR doc can't see at least 10 pts a day.. that would be SLOW.. and there is no reason they shouldn't average at least $150 a visit (including injections, EMG/NCV, physicals, follow up, etc). This gives you around a $400K a year income. Even at just $100 a visit, that is $260K. I could see a facility paying you $200K, IF.. they are only giving you 50 pts a week..but if you are doing more than that.. you need to do the math and ask for more money..

Maybe we should get A-Rod's attorney to get our contracts..LOL


ok, the approach you are taking is liking learning arithmetic, and then assuming that you can do calculus. your approach is overly simplistic and overly optimistic. while salaries are generally higher in the south and midwest, 2 million 4 days a week is a not a realistic goal. IF that is their salary, then they are either performing high level procedures which would require additional training, they have ancillary income/services, or quite simply (and probably more likely) they are performing and/or billing for procedures that they shouldnt be. plus, the general trend is that physician salaries are declining, and seeing as how you have at least 5 years until you are in this position, you might want to think about planning your finances a little differently. i say it again, don't assume you will be getting paid 300K right out of the box. you may be in for a very unpleasant surprise.

also, if you were making 500K as a chiropractor working 3 days a week............. well lets just say that something is wrong there.....
 
I know pain management physicians, some PMR, some anesthesia, who are doing pain ALONE.. nothing else.. and are making over $2 MILLION working 4 days a week, with a 6 week wait to get in to see them.
I know them too - these are the thieves whom rape the system and give those of us who actually try and help our patients a bad name

I was a chiro for 7 years.. a CHIRO.. and I made just under $500K a year working 3 days a week in my own office. This was around $250-350K NET, depending on my overhead and expenses.
I am certain you did exceedingly well. On the other hand, I am equally certain you never told a patient they didn't need an adjustment, never discharged them from care, and may have even told them they needed prophylactic care. Chiros, as a general rule, are in it only for the money. If the patient improves, terrific, but that is not a typical chiropractor's primary focus.

Oh, yes, if you told parents that their children needed prophylactic chiropractic care, or that you could address issues beyond their necks and backs (e.g. issues relating to immunity), there is a special place in hell reserved for you, IMHO.
 
"I think that ampa's numbers are closer to reality. Bottom line: It's just hard out here for a pimp... 😉"

But these numbers are for general physiatrists starting off right? These aren't the salaries of PMR-Pain docs... or PMR-Sports/Spine docs.
 
"I think that ampa's numbers are closer to reality. Bottom line: It's just hard out here for a pimp... 😉"

But these numbers are for general physiatrists starting off right? These aren't the salaries of PMR-Pain docs... or PMR-Sports/Spine docs.

Procedural reimbursement is dependent upon payor-mix and site of service (hospital vs ASC vs Office)
 
I'm going to plead ignorant here.. Can you explain what you just said in simpler terms?
 
I'm going to plead ignorant here.. Can you explain what you just said in simpler terms?

im not sure it can be explained any simpler. look at it this way; in general terms: the more procedures you do, the more you get paid. the better the insurances of your patients, the better you get paid. the more ownership you have of your business, the better you get paid. the fewer other docs around who do what you do, the better you get paid.

no one can give you an exact number, but the closest data you will find is in the MGMA surveys posted on other threads
 
oh, yeah, and the sleazier doc you are, the more you get paid. 😕
 
150/pt x 10pts/day x 50 wks/yr = $350k, not 400

$150 X $10 X 5 days X 52 weeks = $390,000. Just so you see where I got my numbers.

That is gross income, not net. Assuming 50% overhead, that means your net based on the volume you quoted is $175K, not 400.

If you have 50% overhead, you need to change something.

The first day you show up for work you will not have a full schedule. But to asses your numbers, let's assume you do have 10 patients your first day.

The insurance companies will take, on average, 3 months to pay you for the work you do, so the first 12 months you work, your net collections will be ~$130k, not 400.
Welcome to the world of electronic billing. I would see a patient on Tuesday at 5, check cut Wednesday at 8am, e-deposit in my account Thursday by noon. I never waiting more than 10 days for a payment, unless it was WC or PI.

The group you join will have put out money to bring you onboard. They expect a return on their investment, in most cases, and so you will likely get to keep only 50% of your net collections the first year or two. So your share of the net collections is only ~$65k the first year.

If I working for a group, I wouldn't have 50% overhead. What expenses does a group incur by bringing you aboard? If they have the office space and equipment (especially if you are doing Pain), then what does it cost them? Also, if you are in a group, you should be getting patients right off the bat from the group, no waiting to build up a practice.
So in order to make the $250k you were making previously, you will need to see 40 patients a day 5 days a week your first year.

I made $280K, gross my first year as a chiro in a small town. My overhead at the time was $80K. FIRST YEAR.. SOLE PRACTICE.. as a chiro.. I was seeing 75 visits a week within the first 60 days.

ampaphb- 1. My friend sees a lot of people in pain med. He isn't a slime ball, he is just good and almost every ortho, neuro and primary care doctor send him their pain patients. He does 90% injections and is very very busy. He doesn't abuse billing and makes over $2 Million a year. Just because some doctors are extremely busy, doesn't mean they are crooks. He turned down jobs that only offered him $500K a year..and every time.. they would call him back up and give him what he asked for.
2. you know what they say about what happens when you ASSume, right? I never did any of the things you stated. I could easily say you must be a legal drug pusher and you take under the table cash payments for pain meds.. but that would be grouping you with the worst in the profession without knowing what kind of person/physician you are. I could also stereotype you based on your profession.. but I won't, because you may be a good doctor. I don't like the chiros that do what you said either, that is one reason I got out of it. I think you are ****** for saying chiros are in it for the money.. that is the dumbest thing I have ever heard anyone say. Most of them barely make it. I am glad to see that you are an expert on chiropractors and their main focus. Which chiro school did you go to?? Oh.. you didn't.. then stick with your profession that you do know.. do go outside your scope.

MN1: You must be ASSuming that I was in practice for the money.. and that I am in med school for the money. Actually.. it is the opposite. My wife is an attorney and we have been very blessed finacially.. I am in med school so because we want to open free clinics. She now does all pro-bono work and I am planning on this as well. We have already opened a free clinic in my home town and I am in med school so I can help more people.

SSDOC: My office was open from 6am to 6pm, Mon, Wed and Fri. I say 4 paitents per hour at an average of $75 per patient. So I would see around 45-50 pts per day. I rarely saw one patient more than 2 times in a week. So.. when I had 150 visits, this would be at least 130 (or so) different people. I only ever saw one patient more than 12 visits in an entire year. I didn't tell my patients they needed care or over treat for any condition. I saw the patient until MMI (or maximal chiro improvement) which was normally 5-7 visits, then they were released back to their referring physician or work. Most of my patients where primary care referrals for LBP, HA or neck pain. I had onsite X-ray, which I rarely used, a few different stims, US, traction and a few massage therapists. I also go a lot of WC, since I did impairment ratings (AMA certified, of course).
I normally took 4-5 weeks of vacation a year. The $500K number is just for the chiro part of my office. I also had a massage portion that grossed around $185K a year (that had 40% overhead due to paying therapist). I also had a skin care portion with an esthetician that did laser hair removal, facials, skin treamtents, etc. that grossed around 100K a year, also with 40% overhead.

You can get made, argue the numbers, whatever.. this is reality. I will show you tax returns, care plans, whatever.. I have no reason to lie here. I simply started this by saying that YOU should be making more than what is offered to you. I am just saying that if you aren't getting at least 50% of what you bring in, you need to ask for more money.
Maybe I should just open up rehab centers and hire people from here for peanuts, I could make a lot of money off of physicians who think they are worthless.
 
PMRMD2B

What is malpractice insurance like for chiro's? And how much time did you have to fight with insurances for pre-certs? Did you ever get something pre-certed, only to then not be paid for it, or underpaid? And then have to appeal? It's chasing things like this that run up pain doc overheads. That and 30k/year warranties on c-arms.

I agree, doctors undervalue themselves.
 
GD chiros. You really sound like you embody the ethics and principle's of PM&R.


lobelsteve: I hope you know that was a joke. You must be in politics.. you can take one line out of a 1000 word post and use it for a negative. Maybe you should have read the rest of the post. Also.. why is making a dollar unique to chiros? What if I was just a business man and made that statment.. would you say GD business men.. what about MDs that own these types of business, do you say GD these other PMR docs? I don't think so... Don't be made because some chiros work less and make more. Steve.... want a job?

tchoupdoc: I hate to tell you.. my malpractice was $700 a year for $1mill/$3mill.. this is because chiros don't get sued often.. and if they do.. it is for something minor..
I had to fight insurance companies every single day. 80% of my practice was insurance based. We had pre-certs and everything else. In fact, for two years I employed a few MDs and a DO.. It was SOOO much easier to get paid under them. They could do ANYTHING and get paid and they would get paid twice as much as I did, for the same procedures. So.. it doesn't phase me when I hear doctors crying about insurance payments. If you know what you are doing and you bill correctly, you reduce your headaches by 75%. I used to do insurance seminars and charge a lot of money to teach doctors how to bill correctly. I helped a lot of private practice IM and FM docs from going out of business. You just have to bill the way insurance companies want you to bill.. it is THeir game.. just play by their rules and they will give you money.. crazy isn't it?
 
Doctors are not and should not be businessmen. They should be well paid, but should not be invested in making money by the clinical decisions. If we want to own businesses, then it should be ones that can not bias our clinical decisions. I have seen far too many atrocities when clinical decisions take a back seat to financial decisions. Unnecessary imaging, unnecessary procedures, meds for procedures, sex for procedures, TENS for everyone, PT after every procedure, sedation based on insurance only, DC manip under anesthesia based on insurance.

If folks keep screwing around with the money of medicine, we will wind up with a single payor/capitation/healthcare rationing/and 3rd world quality of care.
 
This would be funny if you weren't trying to spread you unrealistic nonsense to med students and residents who might be tempted to believe this silliness.

Overhead includes Rent/Mortgage, front desk staff, MA/RN, PT salaries, equiptment (EMG, C-arm, RF machine, pain table), transcription service, billing service (or the salaries of those who perform these functions for you in house). If you seriously envision all of those services costing $80k/yr, you are in for a rude awakening.

As for getting paid the next day, clearly you don't live in the real world. A well run practice has an average AR of between 30 - 45 days. Linda van Horn, a physician billing and coding expert who lectures at the AAPM&R, ISIS, and ASIPP billing and coding workshops suggests that a well-run pain practice should have an overhead of between 38-42%. Ortho practices run in the high 40s.

What expenses does a group incur to bring a doc onboard? Your salary until you break even, malpractice insurance, benefits, the cost of your support staff, capital expenditure for equiptment you might need (EMG, c-arm, RF-machine, pain table) - between $300 and 450k.

As for your friend, that really made me laugh. OK, lets start with the notion that at 2M/yr, he makes twice as much as pain guys in the 75th percentile of MGMA. So he makes more than all but 1% of his colleagues. But he isn't raping the system - nah! And better still, 90% of what he does is injections. That is the very definition of a block jock. A reputable pain doc seems the patient to determine what needs to be done, does the procedure, and then brings the patient back in follow-up before doing something else. At MOST that is 3 days a week. 4 1/2 days a week procedures, 1/2 day a week f/u? Slimeball. (I know, he is your friend, so to you he is just better at it than ANYONE else in the country, but in th real world, not so much)

Oh yes, your population was 80% private insurance, yet you treated them till they reched MMI, a term reserved for WC. Chiros employing PCPs is an illegal arrangement if ever looked at carefully by the authorities, btw, as the billing for your services was done under THEIR provider numbers - but I'm sure you know that many of your fellow chiros have been prosecuted under the RICO statues for "billing correctly", as you so comically put it. For everyone else reading this - In most states, chiros can't own medical practices, so what they typically do is hire IMGs under whom they bill, and then take the vast majority of the profits out of the corporation as a "management fee". This scheme has been tested in the courts, and a number of high profile chiros have gone to jail as a result. PMRMD2B, you should be glad you were under the radar in your small town, and got out when you did.

By your numbers you were pulling down 700k per year. You have not spoken about anything OTHER than money this entire thread, but you are going into medicine to be altruistic, and serve the greater good? Apparently you can take the snake oil salesman out of the field of chiropractic, but at the end of the day, you remain a snake oil salesman. You are clearly in it for the money, and no amount of impressive retorts like "you are ******ed" or "that is the dumbest thing I have ever heard said" changes that fact.

But don't take my word for it:

Chiropractic: A Critical Evaluation

J Pain Symptom Manage. 2008 Feb 13 [Epub ahead of print]
Ernst E.

Chiropractic was defined by D.D. Palmer as "a science of healing without drugs". About 60,000 chiropractors currently practice in North America, and, worldwide, billions are spent each year for their services. This article attempts to critically evaluate chiropractic. The specific topics include the history of chiropractic; the internal conflicts within the profession; the concepts of chiropractic, particularly those of subluxation and spinal manipulation; chiropractic practice and research; and the efficacy, safety, and cost of chiropractic.

A narrative review of selected articles from the published chiropractic literature was performed. For the assessment of efficacy, safety, and cost, the evaluation relied on previously published systematic reviews. Chiropractic is rooted in mystical concepts. This led to an internal conflict within the chiropractic profession, which continues today. Currently, there are two types of chiropractors: those religiously adhering to the gospel of its founding fathers and those open to change. The core concepts of chiropractic, subluxation, and spinal manipulation, are not based on sound science. Back and neck pain are the domains of chiropractic but many chiropractors treat conditions other than musculoskeletal problems. Chiropractic spinal manipulation has not been shown to be effective for any medical condition. Manipulation is associated with frequent mild adverse effects and with serious complications of unknown incidence. Its cost-effectiveness has not been demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt. The concepts of chiropractic are not based on solid science and its therapeutic value has not been demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt.
 
This would be funny if you weren't trying to spread you unrealistic nonsense to med students and residents who might be tempted to believe this silliness.
That's rigth.. remind them that they are worthless and will never make it.. just because you didn't.

Overhead includes Rent/Mortgage, front desk staff, MA/RN, PT salaries, equiptment (EMG, C-arm, RF machine, pain table), transcription service, billing service (or the salaries of those who perform these functions for you in house). If you seriously envision all of those services costing $80k/yr, you are in for a rude awakening.
I gave you my first year overhead. I didn't have but one staff member and used the x-ray of the occ med doc besided me. As you see, my last few years, my overhead was always over $200K a year.

As for getting paid the next day, clearly you don't live in the real world. A well run practice has an average AR of between 30 - 45 days. Linda van Horn, a physician billing and coding expert who lectures at the AAPM&R, ISIS, and ASIPP billing and coding workshops suggests that a well-run pain practice should have an overhead of between 38-42%. Ortho practices run in the high 40s.
Real world? I billed insurance every single day.. MYSELF.. not some billing company. I know how long it takes to get paid. You are the one out of touch and need to update something if you are waiting 30-45 days to get paid. Even Medicare paid within 15 days.. and this was over a year ago. Wow.. you are saying overhead should be around 40%.. then why were you quoting 50% earlier? I said it would be around 40%, if you read what I wrote.

What expenses does a group incur to bring a doc onboard? Your salary until you break even, malpractice insurance, benefits, the cost of your support staff, capital expenditure for equiptment you might need (EMG, c-arm, RF-machine, pain table) - between $300 and 450k.
Salary is only an expense if you don't have patients. They should have patients lined up the day you arrive. As for equipment, this would only be to a start up group that just starting adding PMR. EMG is cheap, I got a few in storage I'd give away. c-arm would be the only expense and it can be leased for $600 a month. They don't have to pay malpractice upfront.. it is in payments..
As for your friend, that really made me laugh. OK, lets start with the notion that at 2M/yr, he makes twice as much as pain guys in the 75th percentile of MGMA. So he makes more than all but 1% of his colleagues. But he isn't raping the system - nah! And better still, 90% of what he does is injections. That is the very definition of a block jock. A reputable pain doc seems the patient to determine what needs to be done, does the procedure, and then brings the patient back in follow-up before doing something else. At MOST that is 3 days a week. 4 1/2 days a week procedures, 1/2 day a week f/u? Slimeball. (I know, he is your friend, so to you he is just better at it than ANYONE else in the country, but in th real world, not so much)

Block Jock, maybe.. but he is helping more people than you are I bet. And making a good living doing it. His wife is also a board cert anesthesiologist, she stays home with the kids.
Oh yes, your population was 80% private insurance, yet you treated them till they reched MMI, a term reserved for WC. Chiros employing PCPs is an illegal arrangement if ever looked at carefully by the authorities, btw, as the billing for your services was done under THEIR provider numbers - but I'm sure you know that many of your fellow chiros have been prosecuted under the RICO statues for "billing correctly", as you so comically put it. For everyone else reading this - In most states, chiros can't own medical practices, so what they typically do is hire IMGs under whom they bill, and then take the vast majority of the profits out of the corporation as a "management fee". This scheme has been tested in the courts, and a number of high profile chiros have gone to jail as a result. PMRMD2B, you should be glad you were under the radar in your small town, and got out when you did.
You are right.. MMI is MAINLY used for WC, but not exclusively. I used this one.. to show that I only treat until they are as good as I could get them, two.. because I did impairment ratings, so it was common for me to use this term.
I didn't bill for my services under the MD, what I was saying was it was easier to get paid under them.. meaning under their number for their services. In my state, it is perfectly legal for a chiro to employ a MD, in fact, a nurse could.. anyone could .. Must hurt some people's pride to know their equal counterpart worked for a lowly chiro. I never had to be under a radar, I had good attornies that made sure I did everything legal. Second of all.. they would not get charged under RICO.. thye would get charged under STARK laws. For every insult you give to the business of chiro.. there are 100 MDs that have done way worse. There are more MDs in some states than chiros in the entire country. BUt.. yeah.. CHIROS are wrecking the system.. look at yourself pal.

By your numbers you were pulling down 700k per year. You have not spoken about anything OTHER than money this entire thread, but you are going into medicine to be altruistic, and serve the greater good? Apparently you can take the snake oil salesman out of the field of chiropractic, but at the end of the day, you remain a snake oil salesman. You are clearly in it for the money, and no amount of impressive retorts like "you are ******ed" or "that is the dumbest thing I have ever heard said" changes that fact.
If I were talk about ALL Of my income, I would include other businesses that my wife and I owned as well. I ONLY spoke of income I personally made as a chiropractor, not other ventures. The money made from the chiro office was very little compared to my wife's income and our other businesses. Her grandfather started what is now a fortune 500 company. You probably use the company's products on a daily basis and don't know it. Like I said, we are very blessed and I don't have to be in the "business" of medicine anymore. I can do it because I love it and want to help people. Are you willing to do it for free? Give me a year in a free clinic and I will pay off your student loan debt..
I don't need to be a business man, been there, done that. You can bash chiro all you want.. I don't care.. I am going to be a PMR physician.. right beside you.. then you will have to talk down to me about the way my hair looks or my shoes. Medicine has bad in it as well.. chiropractic came along around the same time MDs where still bleeding people to make them better.. and giving them mercury. This isn't a pissing contest.. you can talk about chiro all you want.. it doesn't bother me.. I am not one anymore. I think your feelings are hurt because I made more money than you.. and I wasn't a "real" doctor. Get over yourself.
But don't take my word for it:

Chiropractic: A Critical Evaluation
J Pain Symptom Manage. 2008 Feb 13 [Epub ahead of print]
Ernst E.

Chiropractic was defined by D.D. Palmer as "a science of healing without drugs". About 60,000 chiropractors currently practice in North America, and, worldwide, billions are spent each year for their services. This article attempts to critically evaluate chiropractic. The specific topics include the history of chiropractic; the internal conflicts within the profession; the concepts of chiropractic, particularly those of subluxation and spinal manipulation; chiropractic practice and research; and the efficacy, safety, and cost of chiropractic.

A narrative review of selected articles from the published chiropractic literature was performed. For the assessment of efficacy, safety, and cost, the evaluation relied on previously published systematic reviews. Chiropractic is rooted in mystical concepts. This led to an internal conflict within the chiropractic profession, which continues today. Currently, there are two types of chiropractors: those religiously adhering to the gospel of its founding fathers and those open to change. The core concepts of chiropractic, subluxation, and spinal manipulation, are not based on sound science. Back and neck pain are the domains of chiropractic but many chiropractors treat conditions other than musculoskeletal problems. Chiropractic spinal manipulation has not been shown to be effective for any medical condition. Manipulation is associated with frequent mild adverse effects and with serious complications of unknown incidence. Its cost-effectiveness has not been demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt. The concepts of chiropractic are not based on solid science and its therapeutic value has not been demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt.

Oh no.. you have crushed me with your research article.. what will I do now.. how will I look at myself in the mirror. You can't bash me boy.. I am a grown man with a family and your insults toward a profession I was in doesn't bother me. Tell me I am a bad person because I have a SUV or tell me I am killing the enviroment because I like long showers.. don't come at me with this nonsense.
I can find many article on things you do in practice everyday that have been shown to be ineffective. Big deal..
If all of this article is true.. how come chiro is growing and more insurance companies are paying for it.. because according to you.. I got paid more and faster than a MD can.. sounds like insurance companies aren't questioning it like they are questioning medical care.

I am done with this conversation. ... and quite frankly, with you. I am in NC now, if you ever want to come my way and have a chat about all of this, let me know. I will be glad to teach you.
 
Oh no.. you have crushed me with your research article.. what will I do now.. how will I look at myself in the mirror. You can't bash me boy.. I am a grown man with a family and your insults toward a profession I was in doesn't bother me. Tell me I am a bad person because I have a SUV or tell me I am killing the enviroment because I like long showers.. don't come at me with this nonsense.
I can find many article on things you do in practice everyday that have been shown to be ineffective. Big deal..
If all of this article is true.. how come chiro is growing and more insurance companies are paying for it.. because according to you.. I got paid more and faster than a MD can.. sounds like insurance companies aren't questioning it like they are questioning medical care.

I am done with this conversation. ... and quite frankly, with you. I am in NC now, if you ever want to come my way and have a chat about all of this, let me know. I will be glad to teach you.
Arrogant ignorance - a lethal combination. I wish your future patients well.
 
I made $280K, gross my first year as a chiro in a small town. My overhead at the time was $80K. FIRST YEAR.. SOLE PRACTICE.. as a chiro.. I was seeing 75 visits a week within the first 60 days.

ampaphb- 1. My friend sees a lot of people in pain med. He isn't a slime ball, he is just good and almost every ortho, neuro and primary care doctor send him their pain patients. He does 90% injections and is very very busy. He doesn't abuse billing and makes over $2 Million a year. Just because some doctors are extremely busy, doesn't mean they are crooks. He turned down jobs that only offered him $500K a year..and every time.. they would call him back up and give him what he asked for.
2. you know what they say about what happens when you ASSume, right? I never did any of the things you stated. I could easily say you must be a legal drug pusher and you take under the table cash payments for pain meds.. but that would be grouping you with the worst in the profession without knowing what kind of person/physician you are. I could also stereotype you based on your profession.. but I won't, because you may be a good doctor. I don't like the chiros that do what you said either, that is one reason I got out of it. I think you are ****** for saying chiros are in it for the money.. that is the dumbest thing I have ever heard anyone say. Most of them barely make it. I am glad to see that you are an expert on chiropractors and their main focus. Which chiro school did you go to?? Oh.. you didn't.. then stick with your profession that you do know.. do go outside your scope.

MN1: You must be ASSuming that I was in practice for the money.. and that I am in med school for the money. Actually.. it is the opposite. My wife is an attorney and we have been very blessed finacially.. I am in med school so because we want to open free clinics. She now does all pro-bono work and I am planning on this as well. We have already opened a free clinic in my home town and I am in med school so I can help more people.

SSDOC: My office was open from 6am to 6pm, Mon, Wed and Fri. I say 4 paitents per hour at an average of $75 per patient. So I would see around 45-50 pts per day. I rarely saw one patient more than 2 times in a week. So.. when I had 150 visits, this would be at least 130 (or so) different people. I only ever saw one patient more than 12 visits in an entire year. I didn't tell my patients they needed care or over treat for any condition. I saw the patient until MMI (or maximal chiro improvement) which was normally 5-7 visits, then they were released back to their referring physician or work. Most of my patients where primary care referrals for LBP, HA or neck pain. I had onsite X-ray, which I rarely used, a few different stims, US, traction and a few massage therapists. I also go a lot of WC, since I did impairment ratings (AMA certified, of course).
I normally took 4-5 weeks of vacation a year. The $500K number is just for the chiro part of my office. I also had a massage portion that grossed around $185K a year (that had 40% overhead due to paying therapist). I also had a skin care portion with an esthetician that did laser hair removal, facials, skin treamtents, etc. that grossed around 100K a year, also with 40% overhead.

You can get made, argue the numbers, whatever.. this is reality. I will show you tax returns, care plans, whatever.. I have no reason to lie here. I simply started this by saying that YOU should be making more than what is offered to you. I am just saying that if you aren't getting at least 50% of what you bring in, you need to ask for more money.
Maybe I should just open up rehab centers and hire people from here for peanuts, I could make a lot of money off of physicians who think they are worthless.


Just curious......
How does anyone see 45-50 patients a day? I mean, I know surgeons do it, but many of their patients are wound checks, and the majority of the "paperwork" is done by someone else. But a chiro seeing 50 patients a day? Yet you say that you saw most patients only for 5-7 visits? That means you had a LOT of new patient evaluations.....and remember, you were doing the billing and documentation yourself as well. Quality work there.
 
Just curious......
How does anyone see 45-50 patients a day? I mean, I know surgeons do it, but many of their patients are wound checks, and the majority of the "paperwork" is done by someone else. But a chiro seeing 50 patients a day? Yet you say that you saw most patients only for 5-7 visits? That means you had a LOT of new patient evaluations.....and remember, you were doing the billing and documentation yourself as well. Quality work there.

I did see around 50 pts a day, but this was on a 12 hour day. As I said.. I got many referrals from physicians in town. No one seems to want to treat back pain or doesn't know how. I averaged 52 new patients per month for the last 2 years I practiced. This is why I had to work 12 hours, to fit in new patients. I didn't do all my billing, but I did oversee it and billed myself some days. It was easy.. I could bill a patient in all of 30 secs. My software documented the visit and performed the billing at the same time.. so it was fairly simple, at least on 3rd party insurance patients. My new patient evals were fairly simple on most patients since they usually only had one primary area of complaint and came with notes from the referring physician on their exam findings. You have to also realize that most returning patients where on a treatment plan (therapies, etc) and may not see me but for a few minutes on a return visit. By the time I was seeing this many people I had staff in place to do intake, x-rays, therapy, etc.

Want to try to tear this apart more? Come on.. I have done this in front of Juries many of times for lawyers in WC and PI cases.

I guess you could say I was like a physiatrist, only worked less and got paid more.. without giving injections.
JUST KIDDING.. before anyone chews my head off again. Posting on here is like being in a congressional confirmation hearing.. "you once said you didn't like coffee.. but.. we found out you DID drink it once in college".. OH NO..
 
PMRMD2B,

I have known at least a half-a-dozen DC's who have gone back to school and retrained to become an MD/DO after a few years of being a chiropractor. I've known at least 3 who subsequently went on to become fellowship-trained physiatrists.

All six have agreed on the following points:

1) The practice of chiropractic is essentially smoke and mirrors. That is not to say the some DC's don't do good by their patients. Nor is it to say that there is a complete abscence of evidence-based MSK care in their training. It's just that there's not a lot of science in the day to day practice of the chiropractic healing art.

2) The field has abysmal professional standards.

3) The reimbursement for chiropractors is very low and thus DC's must work on volume.

4) The way DC's are taught and apply spinal manipulation is very different from the way most DO's do, though the techniques themselves are essentially the same. DC's emphasize repeated treatments, maintenance manipulation, etc. DO's more or less are taught to use OMT in a "surgical" fashion--once you "fix" something it's "fixed." I'm sure there is plenty of individual differences on this point.

5) DC's do get a very good grounding in spinal anatomy and physiology (which would make sense) in their core training compared to a typical MD/DO, but once a medical graduate completes appropriate residency training (neurology, physiatry, orthopedic surgery, neurosurgery, radiology, etc) the medical specialists knowledge (at least on a practical level) far exceeds the chiropractors.

6) DC's eat their own exploiting new graduates with substantial educational debt keeping them in relatively low-paying associate roles for years.

7) One cannot see a subluxation on a radiograph. At best it is a purely palpatory phenomemon (which some DO's believe underlies a "somatic dysfunction"); at worst its purely illusory.

8) The subluxation concept is a self-serving invention of the chiropractic profession to justify the need for spinal manipulation.

9) Chiropractors vastly overestimate their understanding of basic medical science.

10) Most chiropractors are still taught and believe anti-scientific principles about disease, vaccination, preventive medicine, etc.

I'm not trying to antagonize you. But, I think focusing on the small number of similarities between DC's/PT's/physiatrists, etc overlooks the obvious and numerous differences between the fields.

For the sake of balance, would you discuss all of the limitations of your previous profession? All the ways you could not help people? All the things that you did not know, or did not realize you knew, and still may not realize you do not know about MSK care...
 
drusso.. I did only talk about the treatment aspect of these professions being close.. not the intent and background so much. I will agree with all the statements you have listed as it concerns to the average chiropractor. I won't argue any of those points, except the getting paid part. It is like all healthcare.. it isn't as lucrative as it was 10 years ago, but in my state, we still get paid very well...better than most primary care docs.

ampa: Give it up man.. why are you so hell bent against chiro.. did one take your patients from you? did you get kicked out of chiro school? I can link you sites of mad MDs that will say PMR docs are nothing but PTs who can write scripts, PMR docs are just legal drug dealers that push pain meds on all patients, I can show you article after article of MDs committing fraud, having sex with patients, killing over 250K people a year, prescribing drugs (antibiotics) that don't treat conditions the patient has, practicing non-evidence based medicine, etc.. The list goes on and on and on.. So don't bash a profession based on internet sites. For every negative thing you can find on chiro.. I can find 3 on medicine.

I am going into medicine.. but it has its problems and questionable people in it as well. Not everyone in chiro is bad.. not everyone in any profession is good or bad.. so back off.. please.. it looks like you have a complex about it.
 
Top