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Pgy3 here who has been thinking about a mix of pp and inpatient once I'm out. Trying to get a feel for what my income might look like. I know insurance reimbursement varies dramatically based on location. If you're comfortable, can you share what the hourly rate a psychiatrist in your area can generate from private insurance and the # pts per hour that requires?
From a quick perusal of the CMS fee schedule for Medicare, the ranges for different localities appear to be: simple visits $70-75, moderately complex $105-110, new $140-160, supportive add-on $70.
Keep in mind that insurance rates can vary highly based on negotiation strategies, # of physicians in the practice, patient volume, the side of the street that you are located, etc.
Its too bad those who accept insurance don't band together and have a 5-10 physician groups more often where they could get in theory much better rates for the same exact work.
This is interesting.
Though I suspect everyone is acting rationally. Total cost may be CHEAPER for insurance companies if they have a narrower provider network, since people who can't get access just decrease utilization. There's no mandate for how broad the network needs to be at the moment--only that the rate needs to be equalized for medical vs. behavioral health.
Meanwhile, given the fact that nobody's banding together means that in reality people are charging much higher rates.
Or that its just a pain to work with a bunch of independent minded doctors. Or some one will be on vacation, or out of the office, or forget to file, or another will super scrutinize and have their lawyer re-draft a clause that everyone else agrees on, etc, etc.Meanwhile, given the fact that nobody's banding together means that in reality people are charging much higher rates.
Or that its just a pain to work with a bunch of independent-minded doctors. Or some one will be on vacation, or out of the office, or forget to file, or another will super scrutinize and have their lawyer re-draft a clause that everyone else agrees on, etc, etc.
Or that its just a pain to work with a bunch of independent minded doctors. Or some one will be on vacation, or out of the office, or forget to file, or another will super scrutinize and have their lawyer re-draft a clause that everyone else agrees on, etc, etc.
I would only consider that if doing cash only practice, but suspect I would have built into my fee structure a rate that would cover the extraneous rather then a separate fee - simple is best.In your current practice, at some point, what if you start charging a membership retainer for things like answering e-mails, etc.?
One of my drives to reach FI is so i can basically do charity care only.
I wouldn't call healthcare in the us rational in any sense of the term. Its all a scam. Every entity is about the money plain and simple camouflaged with some lingo about "patient care comes first." The one thing protecting socialization of medicine is the billion dollar pharma and private insurance keeping votes in their best interest.
One of my drives to reach FI is so i can basically do charity care only.