Literature DB >> 23218640

Paying surgeons less has cost more.

Joseph Bernstein1, Peter Derman.   

Abstract

The Balanced Budget Act of 1997 mandated reductions in physician reimbursement. This reduction in payments could be envisioned to limit expenditures on 2 counts: first, individual fees would be lower, producing inherent savings. Furthermore, reducing fees should depress the incentive to work, thereby generating additional savings from reduced output. A rival point of view holds that lower fees might paradoxically lead to greater spending because surgeons compensate for per-case reductions by performing more cases. If this income-targeting hypothesis is correct, lower per-case fees leads to increased volume. Increased work output has particularly sizable economic effects in fields like orthopedic surgery because the total cost of orthopedic interventions is usually many times larger than the physician's fee (largely owing to the cost of implants). As such, increases in work volume more than negate the potential savings from lower surgeon's fees.This phenomenon was studied in the context of total knee arthroplasty. In the decade spanning 1996 to 2005, inflation-adjusted physician reimbursement decreased by approximately 5% per year, leading to a cumulative drop in reimbursement from $2847 to $1685. Nonetheless, because the number of procedures performed increased from 253,841 to 498,169 and because payments to hospitals far exceeded payments to surgeons, total expenditures for total knee arthroplasty increased dramatically: more than $7.1 billion additional was spent on hospital payments. Continuing to pay surgeons less is apt to continue to cost more. Counter to intuition, the best strategy for controlling overall spending might be higher, not lower, surgical fees. Copyright 2012, SLACK Incorporated.

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 23218640     DOI: 10.3928/01477447-20121120-28

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Orthopedics        ISSN: 0147-7447            Impact factor:   1.390


  9 in total

1.  Not the last word: orthopaedic surgery is lucrative (but evidently not lucrative enough).

Authors:  Joseph Bernstein; Elizabeth W Dunn; Daniel Scott Horwitz
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2015-01-09       Impact factor: 4.176

2.  Not the Last Word: Learned Helplessness and Medicare's Bungled Bundled Payment Program.

Authors:  Joseph Bernstein
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2016-06-22       Impact factor: 4.176

3.  Not the Last Word: Safety Alert: One in 200 Knee Replacement Patients Die Within 90 Days of Surgery.

Authors:  Joseph Bernstein
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2016-12-09       Impact factor: 4.176

4.  Not the Last Word: Unnecessary Surgery Can Never Be Done Well.

Authors:  Joseph Bernstein
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2017-02-08       Impact factor: 4.176

5.  Not the Last Word: Viscosupplementation, Opioid Overuse, and the Excesses of Empathy.

Authors:  Joseph Bernstein
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2017-07-19       Impact factor: 4.176

6.  Your Best Life: Alter Your Paradigms for Radical Change in Your Life.

Authors:  John D Kelly
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2020-03       Impact factor: 4.755

7.  Not the Last Word: Paying Surgeons More Might Cost Less.

Authors:  Joseph Bernstein; Blair S Ashley
Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2020-12       Impact factor: 4.755

8.  Hospital and Surgeon Medicare Reimbursement Trends for Total Joint Arthroplasty.

Authors:  Cesar D Lopez; Venkat Boddapati; Alexander L Neuwirth; Roshan P Shah; H John Cooper; Jeffrey A Geller
Journal:  Arthroplast Today       Date:  2020-06-23

9.  Hospital Payments Increase as Payments to Surgeons Decrease for Common Inpatient Orthopaedic Procedures.

Authors:  Majd Marrache; Andrew B Harris; Varun Puvanesarajah; Micheal Raad; Hamid Hassanzadeh; Uma Srikumaran; James R Ficke; Joseph F Levy; Amit Jain
Journal:  J Am Acad Orthop Surg Glob Res Rev       Date:  2020-04-01
  9 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.