Most would agree that the role of the Hospice and Palliative Medicine (HPM) MD is evolving – or moving into a second generation. The first generation has been characterized by contractual relationships, usually hourly pay, for a part-time medical director role. That role describes, by the way, the predominant arrangement today. It is giving way to the full-time MD, and to compensation arrangements that are typically 100% guarantee, accompanied by subsidies.
But we are starting to see pushback by program sponsors to continued subsidization – and I would respectfully submit that a physician specialty cannot be sustained when it is dependent upon subsidies. Look no further than geriatrics, if you need an example. There are 5% fewer certified geriatricians (7,345) today than 10 years ago, or, put another way, roughly half the number currently needed, according to estimates by those who have studied this workforce issue. Why is that? Surely not because there is less of a need for geriatric specialists. Geriatric services are no longer subsidized by hospitals at the rate, and amount, that they were just a decade ago, and a result compensation has not risen to levels that make the field attractive.
What will be the next (third) generation role of HPM physicians? And, how will those physicians be paid? I would watch closely to what Medicare Advantage plans are doing when it comes to reimbursement. Think bundled payments, or global capitation. What other likely scenarios do you see?
Most Cited Health Law Faculty in the U.S.
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Brian Leiter lists here the top 10 law faculty in the U.S. for the period
2019-2023. Unfortunately, this list is based on a peculiar measure.
Leiter r...
4 hours ago
1 comment:
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