The 2016 Physician Compensation survey reveals the cost of business is increasing for physicians, while income is staying relatively the same.
The cost of business is going up for physicians, according to this year's Physicians Practice Physician Compensation survey.Last year, 32.4 percent of physicians estimated that overhead was 41 percent to60 percent of their revenue. In this year's survey, which included 1,095 physician respondents across multiple specialties, that number shot up to 40.4 percent. The percent of those paying a low percentage of overhead (1 percent to20 percent) decreased from 24 percent last year to 16.6 percent this year. Furthermore, 32 percent said that the cost of overhead was greater for them than it was last year.This rising financial burden may be a problem for many physicians, whose income has stagnated. Nearly 40 percent of respondents said their income was the same as last year, while 28.7 said it went down, and 31.8 percent said it went up. This has, of course, left many physicians disappointed (44.7 percent of respondents).The Physicians Practice Physician Compensation reveals all of this information and more. For more on the rising costs of overhead, read: "Keeping Medical Practice Overhead Down."Physicians Practice will have more results from the 2016 Physician Compensation survey and related content in the coming weeks, stay tuned. Â
Asset Protection and Financial Planning
December 6th 2021Asset protection attorney and regular Physicians Practice contributor Ike Devji and Anthony Williams, an investment advisor representative and the founder and president of Mosaic Financial Associates, discuss the impact of COVID-19 on high-earner assets and financial planning, impending tax changes, common asset protection and wealth preservation mistakes high earners make, and more.
Reducing burnout with medical scribes
November 29th 2021Physicians Practice® spoke with Fernando Mendoza, MD, FAAP, FACEP, the founder and CEO of Scrivas, LLC, about the rising rates of reported burnout among physicians and how medical scribes might be able to alleviate some pressures from physicians.