- Joined
- Aug 27, 2007
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What exactly is the concern right now among the private practice docs about the future of private practice? I gather three main things.. corporate competition, medical insurance hating on you, and oversupply of OD.
It seems that all the people who would be getting their eyes checked at walmart already do, and the people who go to private practices will probably not switch to walmart unless their vision plan disappeared, since the copay (10-20 dollars?) is less than the 39 or 49 they charge at the cheapo commerical sites. Most "employed" people at middle class jobs have vision plans. In other words it seems the market has reached equilibrium in terms of the negative market influence of corporate places so this isn't really going to get any "worse".
The medical insurance thing, is that something which is "bad and getting worse", "bad but stable", or "bad now but improving slowly"? From the OD newsletters i got from the optometrist's office it seems its bad-but-improving but from what people on here say, especially Ken, its getting worse. Is the trick here simply to make phone calls to all your future locations and ask if you can get on the panel there?
Last is the oversupply thing.. anyone have a website containing cities and states with breakdowns of (OD * available hours * capita^-1)? I havent found one yet. The other thing is that tons of the new ODs are asian females (some of my friends) and they fully intend to work 20ish hours/wk max for most of their careers, and also have parents paying for their tuitions. Therefore although the number of ODs is large, the number of OD-labor hours is probably not increasing at such an enormous rate.
My own optometrist runs a very successful group practice containing 2-3 docs including himself at any given time and that's probably the situation I would want to be in eventually. How do you suggest I get into this position? His patient files are approximately 60% ortho-K, 40% regular contacts/glasses, personally sees about 8-10 patients a day and is booked full about 3 weeks forward. This is in the CA bay area suburbs with four other optometry places on the same block and ~20 others in a 3 block radius... and UC berkeley optometry school is 1 hour away. His money is almost exclusively from vision plans, medical plans, and Ortho-K sales. Nobody has paid upfront in several months, according to the front desk lady.
It seems that all the people who would be getting their eyes checked at walmart already do, and the people who go to private practices will probably not switch to walmart unless their vision plan disappeared, since the copay (10-20 dollars?) is less than the 39 or 49 they charge at the cheapo commerical sites. Most "employed" people at middle class jobs have vision plans. In other words it seems the market has reached equilibrium in terms of the negative market influence of corporate places so this isn't really going to get any "worse".
The medical insurance thing, is that something which is "bad and getting worse", "bad but stable", or "bad now but improving slowly"? From the OD newsletters i got from the optometrist's office it seems its bad-but-improving but from what people on here say, especially Ken, its getting worse. Is the trick here simply to make phone calls to all your future locations and ask if you can get on the panel there?
Last is the oversupply thing.. anyone have a website containing cities and states with breakdowns of (OD * available hours * capita^-1)? I havent found one yet. The other thing is that tons of the new ODs are asian females (some of my friends) and they fully intend to work 20ish hours/wk max for most of their careers, and also have parents paying for their tuitions. Therefore although the number of ODs is large, the number of OD-labor hours is probably not increasing at such an enormous rate.
My own optometrist runs a very successful group practice containing 2-3 docs including himself at any given time and that's probably the situation I would want to be in eventually. How do you suggest I get into this position? His patient files are approximately 60% ortho-K, 40% regular contacts/glasses, personally sees about 8-10 patients a day and is booked full about 3 weeks forward. This is in the CA bay area suburbs with four other optometry places on the same block and ~20 others in a 3 block radius... and UC berkeley optometry school is 1 hour away. His money is almost exclusively from vision plans, medical plans, and Ortho-K sales. Nobody has paid upfront in several months, according to the front desk lady.