Docs Get Paid for a Fraction of What They Do

Family doctors are paid mainly for each visit by patients to their offices, typically about $70 a visit. In the practice in Philadelphia covered by the study, each full-time doctor had an average of 18 patient visits a day.

But each doctor also made 24 telephone calls a day to patients, specialists and others. And every day, each doctor wrote 12 drug prescriptions, read 20 laboratory reports, examined 14 consultation reports from specialists, reviewed 11 X-ray and other imaging reports, and wrote and sent 17 e-mail messages interpreting test results, consulting with other doctors or advising patients.

Full article on the uncompensated work burden on family doctors.

Comments (5)

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  1. Larry C. says:

    And the govenment wants to pay them even less. Go figure.

  2. Tom H. says:

    John, as you have pointed out many time, the problem here is that doctors are paid by task. That means some tsaks are compensated; some are not; and doctors have no ability to repackage and reprice their services.

  3. Devon Herrick says:

    You can add another (uncompensated) task to the list of things your family physician does. Experts would like your family physician to provide a “medical home” that coordinates all the care you receive from your other doctors (i.e. specialists), many of which earn nearly double the income of your primary care provider, according to a new article in Health Affairs.

  4. Virginia says:

    Is this perhaps a result of a push by the medical field to specialize? I’m wondering if we’ve begun to think of family physicians as not qualified compared to specialists.

  5. Ken says:

    I agree with Tom. That’s the essence of the problem.