Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Physicians are not overpaid

Everyone likes to complain about how much money doctors make. Many people hear the word "physician" and equate it with a mansion, BMW, and lavish vacation. But physicians don't make nearly as much as you think.

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Physicians are not overpaid

POSTED: Wednesday, January 23, 2013, 6:00 AM

Everyone likes to complain about how much money doctors make. Many people hear the word “physician” and equate it with a mansion, BMW, and lavish vacation. But physicians don’t make nearly as much as you think.

After finishing high school, physicians spend a minimum of 11 years in training. Specialized physicians train even longer, sometimes for as long as 20 years. These are years spent making no money while in school, or making very little money during residency and fellowship. And by the time these individuals are “real” physicians, they are already in their mid-to-late thirties and have spent years struggling financially to support themselves and their families.

During the three to seven years of medical residency, physicians in training who abide by the maximum 80-hour-work-week mandated by the Joint Commission make approximately $11 an hour before taxes. Some residents impermissibly work over 100 hours a week, which makes their hourly wage even lower. Many residents travel to numerous different hospitals, cover the cost of their own gas, and even have to pay for parking at the hospitals where they work. Residents pay hundreds of dollars to attend conferences to improve their knowledge in their area of practice and thousands of dollars to study for and take licensing exams.

Now, you might think that this is a small price to pay to make the big bucks starting at age 35. Wrong. Physician income decreased in 2011, malpractice insurance premiums and other costs are on the rise, and reimbursement rates are declining. Although the potential 26.5 percent Medicare reimbursement cuts were avoided in the fiscal cliff settlement, the fix is only temporary and the increases could still kick in sometime in the future.

At the same time, the cost of medical school tuition continues to increase faster than the rate of inflation. The average osteopathic (D.O.) medical school graduate has $205,675 in debt, and the average allopathic (M.D.) medical school graduate has $162,000 in debt. And as of July 1, 2012, graduate students were no longer eligible for subsidized Stafford Loans offered by the federal government, which will cause medical education debt to increase even more.

So, you think doctors are in it for the money? If they once were, they aren’t anymore. Nearly half of all physicians regret going into medicine. And when asked whether they feel they are adequately compensated, only 51% of physicians say yes.

Healthcare costs could bankrupt our country, and the high cost of physician salaries is a contributing cause. However, we cannot reduce physician salaries until we reduce the cost of physician training. We cannot expect physicians to spend up to 20 years and hundreds of thousands of dollars in training and then pay them a meager salary.

While your radiologist or orthopedist may be making enough money to be considered “rich,” some physicians risk going broke. Your primary care physician may not even be making enough to pay off her medical school loans. Plus, high expenses and debt repayment cause all physicians’ take-home pay to dwindle.

So next time you are jealous of your physician’s salary, remember the time and sacrifice it took to earn that salary, and that her take-home pay isn’t nearly as high as it appears.

And yes, I note in the interest of full disclosure, that I am engaged to a resident physician.

Erica Cohen @ 6:00 AM  Permalink | 41 comments
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Comments  (41)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:45 AM, 01/23/2013
    I think most are missing the point of this article. I don't think the author wanted people to have sympathy for physicians. I think her point was that there is a misconception that most physicians are rich and therefore that drove their decision to become a doctor. If you look at professions with comparable salaries (i.e business or law) the difference in training and debt is not comparable. I do agree that the job security of the profession is likely a bigger motivating factor.
    BLKMD
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:30 PM, 01/23/2013
    I don't blame them - everyone else is!
    redheart85
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:33 PM, 01/23/2013
    My doctor gave me six months to live. I couldn't pay my bill, so he gave me another six months. !!! Thank You , I'll be here all week !!!
    fat tony
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:37 PM, 01/23/2013
    sounds to me like physicians need to unionize
    Ryan
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 2:59 PM, 01/23/2013
    Dave Clemens - average ob/gyn malpractice insurance for one year (paid out of pocket) in the Philly region is about $80,000. Notice how all of the great OB/GYNs are closing up shop? Because they can't afford to stay in business. This is the average IF no one sues - given our litigious region, you can bet most will be sued at some point during their careers and then will pay even more. Repaying loans for Med School and sometimes for undergraduate studies as well could average more than $1,500/month. Every single note made on every single chart needs to be transcribed by a transcription service - more money required for Doctors to do their jobs - and a mandate by law that it is done properly. If you want to start whining about how much people make, perhaps you should start with insurance salespeople who get overpaid for how many miles they drive and how many lunches they buy and who are responsible for the increase in insurance rates for everyone.
    bingbangbong
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:15 PM, 01/23/2013
    the bean counters with MBAs are the only ones who do it for the money. Good ones work for doctors, most bad ones think doctors work for them
    drtjyen
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:22 PM, 01/23/2013
    Yo, beats flippin' burgers and you get good parking at the hospital...are they in for the money? What a dopey question...
    rex nemorensis
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:27 PM, 01/23/2013
    I have been to many, many doctors in the past 4 years for a variety of reasons. I would say that more than half of them are clearly burned out. Honestly, if they don't want to be in their jobs they need to find something else to do. They don't listen to patients. They are always focused on "the next" patient because patient face time is more money. Our healthcare system is broken and is not the best in the world. Anyone who thinks we have the best in the world, clearly does not need healthcare. We all have challenges in our jobs and our financial health. Maybe today's doctors were living in a dream world when they thought their lives would be different. Get over it and do your job like the rest of us have to do.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:35 PM, 01/23/2013
    Yeah they are if you compare to them their even their best-paid counterparts internationally with PCPs making 1.5-2x more than the best-paid PCPs globally and specialists making 3x-5x more than the best paid specialists globally. US doctors do have a much higher debt load but they also make (especially specialists) much, much more than any other their other counterparts. Any seasoned specialist in the US is clearing at least $200k/annually and more likely above $250k.
    PhillyGuy77
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:52 PM, 01/23/2013
    I agree that the cost of a med school is a bigger part of high healthcare costs than physician's salaries. So are/is malpractice suits/insurance.
    cloudkitt
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 7:35 PM, 01/23/2013
    Now that Obummer has been re-elected It's only going to get worse for doctors, their pay is going to be next working for free with Obummer care because Obummer does not believe doctors should be compensated for the their services. Any doctor who voted for Obummer is getting their just desserts for voting for agitator-in-chief, for those who did not vote for Obummer should examine their own hearts to see if they did their part to help Romney, if not then they should have nothing to complain about
    Speak-truth-2-power
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 7:47 PM, 01/23/2013
    Cry me a river! All I ever hear from Docs is how poorly compensated they are.All the ones I know tell kids to get an MBA. Ha! They are so isolated from society that they have no idea how the real world works. The ones I know have 4-8 weeks a year vacation, many are home every night by 5 or 6, etc. All (that I know) travel many times more than the average MBA, and/or have a vacation home. Please. As someone else stated, short of complete malpractice, there is no risk of unemployment or living at sub-living wage. Look at the average physician salaries. Oh, and by the way, if it is so bad, how come not many are abandoning the field? It is so bad, they all stay in! Not saying incomes haven;t shrunk. But a lot of that is all the years of overcharging insurance companies has come back to haunt them.
    fedupwithtaxesnj
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:25 AM, 01/24/2013
    abandoning the field? how can you? when you're only trained to do one thing, and you have too much debt to go back and do anything else? These comments are all so unfounded it is ridiculous.
    frustrated12345
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:40 PM, 01/23/2013
    I'm a pediatrician who went into medicine to make a decent income and make a difference in kids' lives. 17 years later, I have been laid off twice, two of my practices have gone under...I have come very close to defaulting on the 1900/month student loan payments (ask a doc about the evil HEAL loan terms)...I don't own a house...I drive a 10-year old Corolla (in primary care, this is not unusual, trust me). Many of the subsidized federal programs to help young docs pay off debt by volunteering to go int
    frinkie
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 8:40 PM, 01/23/2013
    I'm a pediatrician who went into medicine to make a decent income and make a difference in kids' lives. 17 years later, I have been laid off twice, two of my practices have gone under...I have come very close to defaulting on the 1900/month student loan payments (ask a doc about the evil HEAL loan terms)...I don't own a house...I drive a 10-year old Corolla (in primary care, this is not unusual, trust me). Many of the subsidized federal programs to help young docs pay off debt by volunteering to go int
    frinkie


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Health care is changing almost before our eyes, and the headlines just scratch the surface. From Obamacare to Medicare to managed care to genomics, the blog reports on and analyzes the laws, government policies, and political trends that are transforming the care we receive and the way we pay for it. The Field Clinic dissects the latest health care news, explaining it and putting it in context.

The Field Clinic is written by:

Robert FieldRobert I. Field, Ph.D., J.D., M.P.H, professor of law at the Earle Mack School of Law and professor of health management and policy at the School of Public Health at Drexel University. He is the author of Health Care Regulation in America: Complexity, Confrontation and Compromise, a comprehensive overview of the government’s oversight of health care published by Oxford University Press.

Erica Cohen

Erica Cohen, a third-year law student concentrating in health law at Drexel University Earle Mack School of Law. She graduated from the Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University with a major in online journalism and minors in business and political science. Prior to attending law school, Erica worked for DKMS Americas, the world's largest bone marrow donor center. She currently works as a legal intern in the office of general counsel at a local hospital.

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