Abstract:
ABSTRACT: Physician compensation is of significant interest to the general public and the health care community alike. There is public sentiment that U.S. physicians are compensated well, so actions taken by Congress made physicians an easy target for policies that have led to instability in compensation. This, and increases in administrative costs, correlated with the transition of physicians from private practice to employed models — could be leading to a compensation bubble that will burst if it isn’t addressed.
Yes, “bubbles” are all the rage. You’ve heard about the “dot-com bubble” of the early 2000s, the “housing bubble” of the mid-2000s, and talk of a pending “bond market bubble” along with another “stock market bubble” is making headlines along with concerns of inflation on the horizon. Growth in higher education over several decades is now labeled a “college bubble” that is “leaking like a pierced balloon.”1
Similarly, the cost and use of health care have soared over the past two decades, with anticipated growth to more than 20 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product by 2025.2 Many question the sustainability of that growth by labeling it a “health care bubble.”3
For decades, physicians have been burdened with increases in the cost of attending medical school, duration of training, cost of licensure/maintenance of board certification, and the cost of malpractice insurance. Additionally, increased administrative costs — among other factors — have driven a trend for physicians to move from private practice to employed positions.4
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Studies show physicians feel undercompensated despite increased compensation.5 There are obvious economic factors that suggest an unsustainable compensation bubble for physicians exists nationally. Physicians must prepare themselves through education, training and experience to thrive during the fallout of an impending physician compensation bubble burst.
Examining the Trends
Data suggest a clear inverse correlation between the trend to physician employment and physician productivity, as employed physicians see 19 percent fewer patients than practice owners.6 Meanwhile, the percentage of physicians in private practice decreased from 41 percent in 1983 to 17 percent in 2014.7 Many variables beyond physician control contribute to the decreased productivity, including recent studies suggesting physicians spend greater than 50 percent of their time performing nonclinical tasks.8 Nonetheless, this correlation clearly exists.
Factors such as quality of care and patient satisfaction also arise in conversations about the productivity of private-practice physicians vs. employed physicians. Unfortunately, the presumption that employed physicians provide higher-quality care than private-practice physicians because they are less focused on productivity does not appear to be supported by evidence.9 It is clear, however, that there is a widening gap between physician compensation and productivity, and national survey data from 2017 supports this continued trend.10
Although correlation does not equal causation, this suggests physicians saw an opportunity to be better compensated for the same level of productivity without jeopardizing quality of care by transitioning from private practice to employment. At what point must we ask: Where is the money coming from to make up the difference in compensation and productivity, and how sustainable is the current trend?
Supply and Demand
One result of the trend toward employment is that the economic laws of supply and demand exert a larger role in compensation. Private-practice physicians are held captive to government regulations dictating fixed payment structures, and they have little power to negotiate favorable pay rates from private insurers. Thus, beyond concierge medicine, direct primary care and other niche practice models, they have little power to exert the laws of supply and demand.
On the other hand, hospital systems recognize the critical role physicians serve in ordering tests, hospitalizing patients and ordering ancillary services that fuel their business models, and they understand there is a physician workforce shortage estimated at over 200,000 physicians,11 so they have incentive to employ physicians to ensure a growing patient base for their core revenue streams. This allows physicians who seek employment within hospital systems to capitalize on a supply-and-demand curve that is squarely in their favor.
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Some specialties, such as hospital medicine, clearly show this trend by commanding salary subsidies of $150,000 or more beyond their productivity,12 and if compensation continues to outpace productivity as it has in recent years,13 the phenomenon will undoubtedly spread to other specialties.
Fair Market Value
The current regulatory environment provides downward pressure on compensation and provides limitations to supply-and-demand economics. As physician compensation subsidies grow, some will view them as referral fees or kickbacks. That raises a question: At what point do employers cross the line, from providing favorable compensation packages to violating anti-kickback statutes?
Fair market value restrictions associated with federal laws against health care fraud and abuse, known as the Stark Law, have resulted in suits filed by the federal government against employers.14 Recently, one lawsuit in South Carolina resulted in a $237 million judgment against a community hospital for its compensation arrangement with local surgeons.15 If any of a number of conditions are present, compensation arrangements could be violations of the Stark Law. The conditions:
The party compensating the physician is motivated by a desire to retain or secure referrals.
The terms and conditions contained in the compensation arrangement are highly unusual.
The compensation correlates with, or is affected by, the physician's referrals.
The compensation paid to the physician exceeds the professional fees generated by the physician.
There’s a passage from the concurring opinion in the lawsuit that is very telling about the complexities of innovative physician compensation structures:
“ ‘The picture this case paints: An impenetrably complex set of laws and regulations that will result in a likely death sentence for a community hospital in an already medically underserved area.’ In making this point about the complexity of this area of law, the concurring opinion cites a book on the Stark law authored by HLB attorney Charles B. Oppenheim, The Stark Law: Comprehensive Analysis & Practical Guide 1 (AHLA 5th ed. 2014): ‘[t]he Stark law is infamous among health care lawyers and their clients for being complicated, confusing and counter-intuitive; for producing results that defy common sense, and sometimes elevating form over substance. Ironically, the Stark law was actually intended to simplify life by creating "bright lines" between what would be permitted and what would be disallowed, and create certainty by removing intent from the equation.’ ”
The tremendous potential financial implications of Stark Law violations, if nothing else, slow the compensation bubble from growing faster, because new contracts can push the limits beyond a benchmark only so far. Thus, for employers to increase compensation beyond productivity increases and remain compliant with fair market value regulations, physician compensation survey data and benchmarks must first reflect an increase in median compensation. Overall, while fair market value regulations have slowed the cadence of the gap between physician productivity and compensation, the gap continues to widen.10
Inflation’s Effects
Another troublesome economic factor for private practice physicians is inflation. In the last 20 years, administrative, personnel and supplies costs in the health care sector have all risen significantly — even beyond the general inflation rate.4
Over the same time, however, Medicare reimbursement rates have declined dramatically when adjusted for inflation. For example, Medicare physician reimbursement for orthopedic surgery procedures fell an average of 28 percent between 1992 and 2007, when adjusted for inflation. And while private-payer data is not as readily available, general correlations in reimbursement exist16 so one can assume a similar pattern across the spectrum of payer sources.
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For private-practice physicians, these truths are seen clearly on their accounting ledgers and ultimately in their personal bank accounts. On the other hand, employed physicians are in an advantageous position when it comes to inflation. Supply-and-demand economics combine with inflation to yield employee compensation rates in free markets. Thus, employed physicians are able to demand compensation that incorporates these market forces, ultimately leading to steadily increasing wages despite decreased productivity and declining (relative to inflation) payer reimbursement.
An Unsustainable Situation
As private-practice physicians will attest, rising personnel costs with declining reimbursement rates lead to concerns of insolvency. For decades, hospital systems have been able to use economies of scale to absorb the mismatch in the physician compensation and physician productivity curves despite declining reimbursement; but with most hospital systems’ operating margins currently at about 3 percent and falling,17 these employers eventually will run out of ways to reallocate funds to cover physician compensation subsidies.
While this isn’t necessarily gloom and doom for physicians, it would force a rebalancing — or bursting — of the physician compensation bubble by:
Introducing new and innovative payment models that are susceptible to free-market forces.
Introducing an inflation adjustment to current payer reimbursement models.
Shifting to lower-cost delivery systems, such as telehealth or care provided by advanced-practice clinicians.18
Requiring physicians to accept lower overall compensation.
But what if the worst-case scenario happens? What if the United States experiences inflation at the levels of the early 1980s? If physicians demand compensation adjustments that match the extreme inflation rates of 15 to 20 percent, it will be impossible for our health care system — hospital systems and private practices alike — to absorb that level of inflation, given the current reimbursement structure and low operating margins.
This would bankrupt hospital systems across the United States and force physicians to either see their compensation as an employee be outpaced by inflation (devaluing their net compensation) or force them back to private practice in an even more insolvent business environment than when they left private practice.
Protecting Yourself as a Physician
Physicians in the United States need to be aware of the market forces affecting their compensation and how those same market forces impact their employers.
For decades, many physicians had the luxury of transitioning from private practice to employment as a way of escaping excessive administrative costs, rising costs to become and remain a licensed physician, bureaucratic rules decreasing productivity, and declining reimbursement rates relative to inflation. But that option might be coming to an end.
Physicians must take action to separate themselves from their competition and protect their financial futures — and the time is now.
While many organizations exist to serve the needs of physicians, they largely have failed to protect the financial futures of their members. Advocacy efforts by professional and subspecialty groups for decades have failed to reduce administrative burdens that decrease productivity or to ensure reimbursement structures that protect physician compensation against the catastrophic risks of inflation and permit the benefits of supply and demand. This is evidenced by the trends outlined here.
Now that most physicians are temporarily financial beneficiaries of the laws of supply and demand as employees of health care systems, they must join forces with organizations that now have a vested interest in protecting the fees generated by physician services to provide great strength in numbers and financial resources in advocating for real and sustainable improvement in these areas. The financial future of both physicians and hospital systems depend upon it.
2016 SURVEY: Advanced Degrees, Certification Provide Boost in Physician Leader Compensation
Also, a physician with expertise in complementary fields of study allows employers to gain benefit beyond clinical productivity. Employers recognize physicians with advanced degrees, such as a master’s in business administration or public health, as well as certifications, such as Certified Physician Executive credentials, with higher compensation packages than for physicians who hold the same position without these additional qualifications.19
Additionally, should hospital systems be forced financially to reverse trends and no longer directly employ as many physicians, demonstrating a diverse education with more diverse skills than pure clinical expertise will provide separation from the competition. In a broader sense, physicians in leadership positions can serve as advocates for physician interests within health care organizations by bridging knowledge gaps for nonclinical and/or nonphysician decision-makers.
The more others understand the challenges physicians face and how addressing those challenges can improve our health care system, the more likely they will be to modify policies, procedures and protocols to be more favorable for physicians.
Summary
Physician compensation has evolved over time at the hands of many market forces. These forces have, for decades, driven physicians from private practice to employment, and the rising costs of becoming a physician lead new doctors to value the perceived security of employment.2,4 Of all the market forces, changes in inflation rates pose perhaps the most significant threat to the long-term sustainability of physician compensation rates. And while physicians currently benefit from supply and demand, employers can increase physician compensation subsidies only so much before they become insolvent in current reimbursement models.
This is the essence of the growing physician compensation bubble, and physicians must protect themselves against this bubble by diversifying their education and joining forces with both physician and nonphysician health care organizations to advocate for innovative health care payment models.
Seger S. Morris, DO, MBA, FACOI, FACP, CPHQ, is an internal medicine hospitalist at Magnolia Regional Health Center in Corinth, Mississippi, where he holds leadership positions in areas of health care quality, revenue cycle management, clinical documentation and graduate medical education.
Heather Lusby, DO, is in her third year as an internal medicine resident at Magnolia Regional Health Center in Corinth, Mississippi, where she is a resident representative and involved in research in antimicrobial stewardship.
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