Editor’s Note: Notice Anything Different?
January 1st 2009We like to mix it up at Physicians Practice. So this year, we’ve developed six new columns, a snappy new format, and will feature our fave physician-written essays. Who says practice management can’t be fun? Never fear, your favorite columns will return to provide the expert advice you’ve come to expect from Physicians Practice.
Editor’s Note: Are You Being Paid Fairly?
December 15th 2008Compensation is a challenging subject for oncologists - more so now than ever. In our second edition of Your Best Practice we address some of the tougher questions on how and why some oncologists are paid more than others. We also give timely advice on reducing denials through technology. As ever, our goal is to help you manage your practice more effectively, one expert tip at a time.
Editor’s Note: Are You Being Paid Fairly?
December 15th 2008Negotiating with payers is tough for pediatricians. But you have more power than you think. In our second edition of Your Best Practice we share the nitty-gritty on presenting your case for better compensation. We also give timely advice on managing requests for prescriptions and immunization records. As ever, our goal is to help you run your practice more effectively, one expert tip at a time.
Editor’s Note: Healthcare’s Quiet Tragedy
July 15th 2008Nearly one American physician commits suicide each day. One a day. This grisly stat is well-known among physicians, even if it seems counterintuitive to the general public. Physicians, after all, are smarter, more accomplished, and better-paid than the average person. They’re on top of the world, aren’t they?
Editor’s Note: It’s Time, at Last, for a Mandate
June 1st 2008It’s an individual mandate that most Americans must purchase auto insurance if they want to drive. But, mandatory health insurance? Is that the right way to reform healthcare? Read further to hear executive editor Bob Keaveney’s cogitations on this issue.
Editor’s Note: Dr. Tom’s Prescription
May 1st 2008American healthcare is riddled with too many government and private-payer bureaucrats standing between physicians and their patients. And it’s saddled with perverse incentives that bloat administrative costs pointlessly. Find out what Tom Coburn, an OB/GYN doc and conservative Republican U.S. senator from Oklahoma, thinks the answer is.
Editor’s Note: D-I-Y Career Repair
April 1st 2008Robert Posner and Herbert Parris have never met, but they have a lot in common. Both internists, each became frustrated with the “third-party tango” and decided to break out of the mold. Read how they rejuvenated their practices with a little creativity and a lot of moxie.
Editor’s Note: The Curse of Longevity
March 1st 2008For every U.S. healthcare dollar spent on the average 35- to 44-year-old, about $4.50 is spent on the average person aged 75 and older. This phenomenon, though seemingly self-evident, is relatively new. Read what our executive editor has to say about American healthcare “becoming a victim of its own success.”
The Editor’s Note: The Ratings Game
February 1st 2008Ratings Web sites are intended to serve people looking for a physician, but they also function as a forum for nasty, often personal, attacks against physicians named publicly by anonymous accusers. Are they fair? Or credible? Hear what Physicians Practice’s executive editor has to say.
Editor’s Note: A Tale of Two Solutions?
January 1st 2008Is the medical malpractice insurance crisis over? Has the long nightmare of frivolous jury awards, over-the-top settlements, skyrocketing premiums, and fleeing physicians finally come to an end? Hear what Physicians Practice’s executive editor has to say.
The 2006 Physicians Practice Technology Survey: Piecing IT Together
September 1st 2006Are you a technology troglodyte or an “early adopter”? When it comes to IT, physicians have a reputation of being resistant, even hostile, toward change. But is it true? We found out with our second annual no-hype survey.