Alpharetta, Ga., August 20, 2008
With health care spending skyrocketing, doctors expressing growing dissatisfaction, and roughly 48 million Americans uninsured, presidential politics is prompting considerable discussion about health care reform. But how do physicians feel about some of the possible "fixes" for U.S. health care? And how are physicians faring financially as another Labor Day approaches?
Among 3,116 responses to a recent survey on physician compensation conducted by LocumTenens.com, only 16 percent of providers thought universal healthcare would affect their incomes positively. While 42 percent of respondents predicted no effect on physician salaries from universal healthcare, another 42 percent predicted a negative effect.
"In an earlier survey on the election and healthcare reform, physicians were fairly evenly divided as to the ‘solution’ for improving our health care system," LocumTenens.com Senior Vice President Pamela McKemie said. "Twenty-seven percent said it was universal healthcare with multi-payer reimbursement, twenty-three percent said it was universal healthcare with single-payer reimbursement, and twenty-five percent selected ‘tax credits to allow more people to afford healthcare.’ "
McKemie noted that only five percent of respondents to the earlier survey wanted to “leave the current system in place,” while 12 percent offered an “other” answer.
Physicians’ open-ended comments related to universal healthcare’s effect on their incomes offered a mix of perspectives:
Average physician compensation, calculated for specialties staffed by LocumTenens.com, included:
Sixty-six percent of respondents to the LocumTenens.com salary survey were male, 34 percent female. Female physician salaries averaged approximately 67 percent of the average male physician salary for employer-based and private-practice physicians ($180,465 versus $267,469, respectively).
Forty percent identified themselves as employer-based, while 28 percent said they were in private practice. Only 18 percent of respondents declared their employment status as “locum tenens or independent contractor exclusively,” but 26 percent said they had worked as a locum tenens provider.
Founded in 1995, LocumTenens.com is a full-service physician recruitment firm specializing in anesthesiology jobs, cardiology jobs, psychiatry jobs, radiology jobs, surgery jobs and CRNA jobs with U.S. hospitals, medical groups and community health centers. LocumTenens.com is part of the Jackson Healthcare family of companies. To learn more, visit http://www.locumtenens.com/welcome.
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