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It's pathetic to get primary care reimbursement rates? So, ophthalmologists are somehow better than primary care docs? It's not enough to just say that it's pathetic to get LOW reimbursement rates, but it's pathetic to get PRIMARY CARE reimbursements rates...?I think in this day and age of bloated ever increasing med school tuitions, overall opportunity cost plus years spent on re-training to a new body of knowledge and surgical risk taking, reimbursements at or close to primary care levels is pathetic no matter how humble one tries to be.
Ocularis could'nt have said it better. The taboo culture of ophthalmology salaries, the great sdn speculations, the out of touch academic advisors who never had to kill to eat outside the walls of academia and lack of other reliable network or sources of information about this topic have made pursuing ophthalmology a leap of faith based on here-say salaries and low-stress lifestyle more than anything.
It's pathetic to get primary care reimbursement rates? So, ophthalmologists are somehow better than primary care docs? It's not enough to just say that it's pathetic to get LOW reimbursement rates, but it's pathetic to get PRIMARY CARE reimbursements rates...?
It's pathetic to get primary care reimbursement rates? So, ophthalmologists are somehow better than primary care docs? It's not enough to just say that it's pathetic to get LOW reimbursement rates, but it's pathetic to get PRIMARY CARE reimbursements rates...?
This is exactly what keeps the spindles of new ophtho applications spinning, the few outliers making good dough, gloating about their riches, skewing and misrepresenting the hard working rest who have found themselves in environments, cities or contracts not as apt for success, or even decent specialist reimbursement. Stating that someone sucks in" business of ophthalmology" (as a successful story), is akin to blaming a poor person for not having the knowledge of picking last nights lottery numbers. Argument towards this field being a guarantee of success is still lacking. There is more certainty becoming a nurse and then CRNA, incomes equal (160-180), or just about any hospital based speciality that brings money to the hospitals. I just want to make this stand as a warning to medical students to take statements like this with a grain of salt, but absolutely not base their decision to enter this field, like I did with a leap of faith, love for the field aside.
But if it is in your dream to take huge financial risk, become an "elitist" above all and put your own and family's financial life, retirement and security at risk, then play along, but don't forget to look around at the bigger shifts and changes in our current medical landscape, where medicine (and money) is going towards hospital/HMO centered care, and rules making PP difficult, whats left for you later may be not worth your struggle when you get there
This is exactly what keeps the spindles of new ophtho applications spinning, the few outliers making good dough, gloating about their riches, skewing and misrepresenting the hard working rest who have found themselves in environments, cities or contracts not as apt for success, or even decent specialist reimbursement. Stating that someone sucks in" business of ophthalmology" (as a successful story), is akin to blaming a poor person for not having the knowledge of picking last nights lottery numbers. Argument towards this field being a guarantee of success is still lacking. There is more certainty becoming a nurse and then CRNA, incomes equal (160-180), or just about any hospital based speciality that brings money to the hospitals. I just want to make this stand as a warning to medical students to take statements like this with a grain of salt, but absolutely not base their decision to enter this field, like I did with a leap of faith, love for the field aside.
But if it is in your dream to take huge financial risk, become an "elitist" above all and put your own and family's financial life, retirement and security at risk, then play along, but don't forget to look around at the bigger shifts and changes in our current medical landscape, where medicine (and money) is going towards hospital/HMO centered care, and rules making PP difficult, whats left for you later may be not worth your struggle when you get there
This is exactly what keeps the spindles of new ophtho applications spinning, the few outliers making good dough, gloating about their riches, skewing and misrepresenting the hard working rest who have found themselves in environments, cities or contracts not as apt for success, or even decent specialist reimbursement. Stating that someone sucks in" business of ophthalmology" (as a successful story), is akin to blaming a poor person for not having the knowledge of picking last nights lottery numbers. Argument towards this field being a guarantee of success is still lacking. There is more certainty becoming a nurse and then CRNA, incomes equal (160-180), or just about any hospital based speciality that brings money to the hospitals. I just want to make this stand as a warning to medical students to take statements like this with a grain of salt, but absolutely not base their decision to enter this field, like I did with a leap of faith, love for the field aside.
But if it is in your dream to take huge financial risk, become an "elitist" above all and put your own and family's financial life, retirement and security at risk, then play along, but don't forget to look around at the bigger shifts and changes in our current medical landscape, where medicine (and money) is going towards hospital/HMO centered care, and rules making PP difficult, whats left for you later may be not worth your struggle when you get there
This is exactly what keeps the spindles of new ophtho applications spinning, the few outliers making good dough, gloating about their riches, skewing and misrepresenting the hard working rest who have found themselves in environments, cities or contracts not as apt for success, or even decent specialist reimbursement. Stating that someone sucks in" business of ophthalmology" (as a successful story), is akin to blaming a poor person for not having the knowledge of picking last nights lottery numbers. Argument towards this field being a guarantee of success is still lacking. There is more certainty becoming a nurse and then CRNA, incomes equal (160-180), or just about any hospital based speciality that brings money to the hospitals. I just want to make this stand as a warning to medical students to take statements like this with a grain of salt, but absolutely not base their decision to enter this field, like I did with a leap of faith, love for the field aside.
But if it is in your dream to take huge financial risk, become an "elitist" above all and put your own and family's financial life, retirement and security at risk, then play along, but don't forget to look around at the bigger shifts and changes in our current medical landscape, where medicine (and money) is going towards hospital/HMO centered care, and rules making PP difficult, whats left for you later may be not worth your struggle when you get there
But lets be clear here that almost all surgical subsp or hospital based fields take that component of uncertainty out, are sought after, and are as competitive to match into, or less, than ophthalmology.
I came here looking for support and some encouragement to go on, neither of which took place, rather I got singled out for being lazy, lacking business skill and lack desire to take risks. But this confirmed what ophthalmology is private practice is, an entrepreneurial business more so than any other medical speciality, perhaps derm nearby. I admire you guys, but this is not everyone's dream and forte.
Neurofiber, what you are concerned about is very real. This has been real for a very long time and will not get better any time soon. Position offerings in competitive areas are miserable. Predatory practices churn associates every 2 years in LA, San Francisco, NY, etc. Good partnership opportunities are more of a myth unless you are coming into your daddy's practice or get incredibly lucky. Anesthesia, ortho, ENT, plastics although tough can still find something decent and leading somewhere. Neurosurgery, heme-onc, derm, primary care can write their own ticket ANYWHERE they go. Ex., good friend just signed primary care with So Cal Kaiser $290K start, where as general ophtho starts ~$220K and getting one of these positions is still impossible. Of course, you can move to a "small Southern town" as Lightbox will tell you and collect $$$ from your surgery center, optometrists, optical, etc. But this is not for everyone.
Lightbox - unfortunate, would love to read it!
Yeah, I'm not really sure why that entire thread was deleted. I'll summarize some of the main points ;-)
- Practice buy-ins vary ALOT. I really don't think there is any "set formula" by which an associate will buy into a practice. I believe that a practice buy-in will be more expensive if the owners are younger, since they have less incentive to give up equity. For example, if a practice is owned by one person and has a net profit of 1 million, then why would this young owner give up 50% of the equity for a measly 1 million? It does not make much sense in this situation since the owner could easily earn that 1M back in 1 year and still retain 100% of the equity. The situation is different if the owner is old and wants to retire soon. In that case, getting a 1M check makes more sense since the owner does not want to work much longer. For a young owner to give up any equity, he is hoping that the OVERALL profit will increase by having the extra provider want to stick around since he/she now has an equity stake. That is the reason an owner wants the associate to work for him for a few years... to see if: (a) the overall profit will increase enough such that the original owner's take-home increases overall if he lets this guy buy in; and (b) he can actually get-along with this new associate. It is one thing to have a pain-in-the-ass associate, but a much worse thing to have a pain-in-the-ass business partner that you can't get rid of anymore! Let's say that the owner decides having this associate as a business partner makes sense. Then the owner is probably going to offer the max buy-in price that he can get without scaring off the associate. Conversely, the associate is going to only pay the minimum buy-in price without scaring off the owner from withdrawing his offer. Thus, there likely will be negotiation somewhere in the middle. Both the owner and the associate will likely get formal practice valuations from consultants and come to a negotiated price somewhere in the middle. The period of the buy-in also widely varies. Some owners will accept a full buy-in immediately, but sometimes the associate won't be able to secure a bank loan or afford its required payments. Other owners will only allow the associate to buy in a certain % per year (e.g. 10% per year for 5 years). There is no hard-and-fast rule to these things.
- "Average salary" of partners. Equity owners do not think in terms of salaries. Salaries are the pittance that owners pay themselves to fulfill IRS requirements for corporations. At my practice, us owners pay ourselves a salary of 250k/year. What we think of as owners is what our monthly "distributions" are going to be (i.e. the net monthly profit of the business divided among owners according to their equity stake). My monthly distribution is in the low 6-figure range. Obviously, these monthly distributions are going to be directly dependent on how profitable the business is during that month. The absolute/net profit varies widely but, as reiterated countless times, these are some of the main factors:
* # of owners (e.g. more owners == more division of the profit)
* # of non-owner providers (e.g. more associates/optometrists/PAs, etc --> more revenue hopefully generated without having to pay them any distributions)
* insurance mix
* ASC ownership (e.g. ~1/3 of my distribution is from the ASC facility fees)
* cash services
* # of optical shops and other ancillary product/service income streams.
* real estate ownership / rental income
* how efficiently your clinic and ASC are run (i.e. overhead). The biggest overhead for most businesses is STAFF (salary, benefits). Some practices have very low overhead, but also very low revenue because they cannot see patients with low staff.
Conversely, some practices have very high overhead, but also very high revenue because they churn them out. Obviously, having low revenue but high overhead is a bad combination!
I wrote more stuff, but those topics are escaping me right now. I'll try to remember what else I wrote later!
From the point of view of a young associate, the next question then is what happens if you turn out to be in one of the many practices that churns through associates and there's no realistic possibility of partnership?
Other than start-up costs, the greatest obstacle to starting your own practice is restricted covenants. It's may be wrong to open up shop next door and "take" patients from a practice but it's not right working for a practice that holds out hope for partnership without ever really intending to follow through either.
From the point of view of a young associate, the next question then is what happens if you turn out to be in one of the many practices that churns through associates and there's no realistic possibility of partnership?
The options are pretty clear:
- Try to fight the non-compete. Some of my friends have successfully gotten out of their non-competes by legal wrangling. Cost a pretty penny in legal fees (e.g. 50k), but worth it in the long-run if you really want to stay in a specific geographic location. Sometimes you cannot eliminate a non-compete altogether, but can limit some of its scope.
- Open up shop just outside of your non-compete radius.
- Move to a different area and join a practice that may have a clearer path toward partnership.
I'm sure some of the mega-practices out there (e.g. >20 providers) have more structured pathways to partnership for their young associates. These pathways are probably more analogous to the "partnership" or equity that you obtain via a Kaiser gig. I guess the benefit of these more structured pathways is that they are more well-defined and "guaranteed" since many other associates have achieved it before you. i.e. there is a proven "track record" of this mega-practice giving up equity in a pre-defined manner. The downside is that your equity and control are diluted by having many partners! Personally, I don't foresee myself wanting more than 1 or 2 partners. I guess a practice could always substitute "partnership" with an offering of non-voting shares so that the original partners can stay in control. But I'm sure that breeds some bad blood between the owners of the two classes of stock.
Your numbers for IM and EM long term are highThe lack of discussion about this is problematic, and doesn't parallel the culture in other specialities, where I think earning potential is much more openly discussed. It's far from taboo, it's a critical component of our lives and definitely plays into our career decisions daily, and I wouldn't believe 95% of individuals who would say it doesn't. It is important, we have had a huge financial and time opportunity cost. We have loans, families to support, etc. And we want to live more or less nice lives, which I don't feel so guilty about with all that I have put in and sacrificed. All that being said, salary is of course not the defining factor of why we chose ophtho, and this should be inherently assumed without need for constant clarification or reiteration. Most on this board are beyond having decided ophtho is the right choice for a myriad of reasons, and now it is onto having legitimate questions: what now, what can I anticipate, and how do I position myself in the best way. I'm just a resident, so I can't give my 2 cents, but it would be very nice if some of the practicing doc's on here shared more about salary detail and the specifics of how to get into a successful practice, what true earning potential is (sub-specialties in mind, rural vs. metropolitan being known factors of discrepancy and what the discrepancies actually are), what to look out for in joining practices, etc. The down and dirty details right down to speciality specific RVUs are very much discussed on other specialty boards with important career specific advice.
4424 - what kind of salary increase do you anticipate over the next few years? what is a realistic career goal? are you sub-specialized?
I think all of medicine just assumes that ophtho is filthy rich, when I tell my colleagues that ophtho start is about 150-200K I literally get jaw-dropping reactions, and "wow, IM and hospitalist's make more!" -- which is true, and it burns a bit to hear that over and over again without even having a clear understanding of how my start salary will compare with my career long salary. I get that 180K is still a great life salary, but 4 years of med school, hundred's of thousands of debt later, and 4 years of residency later - it doesn't seem enough when your fellow IM doc or hospitalist is starting at 250K with a great lifestyle, and probably did not even have to fight to match. You look at derm, rads, IM, EM, really anything and you can easily start at 250K with 300-400K career earning potential with life-style preserved, and I am wondering if this is realistic in ophtho. It's entirely possible that the lack of discussion here just makes this board unfavorably skewed and disillusioned, but I think this discussion should be promoted and thorough, because otherwise the lack of it is just making the grim outlook appear to be the reality.
Haha, okay first thing you have to do: review my previous posts on how great Ophthalmology is in terms of $$$ (if that is your thing). And no, I don't practice in some "small Southern town", but I'm sure that the eye surgeons that do are making a killing and aren't fighting over every cataract like some other docs out there.
Third, most people in my similar situation scoff at the difference between 220k vs. 290k. There really is NO significant difference in lifestyle between those starting salaries. Heck, even "300-400K career earning potential" is a bit of a joke. I think there is a definite change of lifestyle toward the 600-800k level, but it is all relative. Not to sound too elitist, but I can't imagine being down at 600k anymore. Yes, you get used to whatever level you achieve, and it is hard to go DOWN in compensation once you reach a certain level.
Again, most of the principal guys around here that OWN their practice make in the 7-digits for sure. And yes, they profit off the work of their associate Ophthalmologists, Optometrists, etc. That being said, do you really need 7-figures to be happy? The answer is a definite NO. If you can't be happy with 200-300k, you won't be content no matter how much $ you earn. I achieved my revenue level pretty quickly, so I'm still used to living like a fellow. I just stick my money in my brokerage account, because I don't need the newest Tesla or whatever to be happy. I would rather watch the # in my brokerage account grow and feel good that my family is financially secure.
One thing that we can all agree on is that you won't learn how to make this level of dough from your academic attendings and advisors. I love them all and owe my training to them, but you won't learn how to run a business from them. Lastly, to switch specialties solely because of posted associate salaries is just plain foolish. If you suck at the business of Ophthalmology, you are going to suck no matter what field you choose (sorry for the lack of eloquent vocabulary!).