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Are Doctors Overpaid? | Vendor Earnings Momentum August 10, 2023
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Together with
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“What makes me angry is the CEO incomes for hospitals, insurance companies & most everything involved in the actual causes of the high cost of healthcare in this country that makes healthcare unaffordable for many.”
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Frumious, in an AuntMinnie forum thread on physician salaries.
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A new study on physician salaries is raising pointed questions about pay for US physicians and whether it contributes to rising healthcare costs – that is, if you believe the numbers are accurate.
The study was released in July by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), which produces in-depth reports on a variety of topics.
The current paper is highly technical and may have languished in obscurity were it not for an August 4 article in The Washington Post that examined the findings with the claim that “doctors make more than anyone thought.”
It is indeed true that the NBER’s estimate of physician salaries seems high. The study claims US physicians made an average of $350k in 2017, the year that the researchers focused on by analyzing federal tax records.
- The NBER estimate is far higher than $294k in Medscape’s 2017 report on physician compensation – a 19% difference.
The variation is even greater for diagnostic radiologists. The NBER data claim radiologists had a median annual salary in 2017 of $546k – 38% higher than the $396k average salary listed in Medscape’s 2017 report.
- The NBER numbers from six years ago are even higher than 2022/2023 numbers for radiologist salaries in several recent reports, by Medscape ($483k), Doximity ($504k), and Radiology Business ($482k).
But the NBER researchers claim that by analyzing tax data rather than relying on self-reported earnings, their data are more accurate than previous studies, which they believe underestimate physician salaries by as much as 25%.
- They also estimate that physician salaries make up about 9% of total US healthcare costs.
What difference is it how much physicians make? The WaPo story sparked a debate with 6.1k comments so far, with many readers accusing doctors of contributing to runaway healthcare costs in the US.
- Meanwhile, a thread in the AuntMinnie forums argued whether the NBER numbers were accurate, with some posters warning that the figures could lead to additional cuts in Medicare payments for radiologists.
The Takeaway
Lost in the debate over the NBER report is its finding that physician pay makes up only 9% of US healthcare costs. In a medical system that’s rife with overutilization, administrative costs, and duplicated effort across fragmented healthcare networks, physician salaries should be the last target for those who actually want to cut healthcare spending.
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What Can We Do About Physician Burnout?
Clinical burnout is widespread in healthcare. What can be done to combat burnout in imaging? Listen to Sonia Gupta, MD, chief medical officer of enterprise imaging at Change Healthcare, as she addresses concerns and offers possible solutions that you can use right now.
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Fast. Flexible. Modern.
United Imaging’s service organization is called Customer Success for a reason. Their mission is to think ahead, understand their customers’ goals, and proactively help customers achieve them. They also store critical service parts in the U.S. and back up their promises with the United Performance Guarantee.
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- Vendor Earnings Momentum: With the summer earnings season drawing to a close, radiology vendors appear to have continued the momentum they showed with spring financial results. At constant currency rates, most companies saw year-over-year revenue growth, including GE HealthCare Imaging and Ultrasound divisions (+11% to $3.5B), Siemens Healthineers Imaging division (+15% to $3.1B), Philips Diagnosis & Treatment division (+12% to $2.3B), Fujifilm Medical Systems (+7.5% to $981M), Canon Medical Systems (+7% to $883M), Hologic Breast Health division (+27.5% to $360M), and Varex Imaging (+8% to $232M). Going the other direction was Butterfly Network, which saw a revenue decline (-3.8% to $19M).
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- NVIDIA Releases Generative AI Toolkit: Graphics processing unit giant NVIDIA has released AI Workbench, a toolkit designed to help developers create generative AI models on a PC or workstation. The toolkit is designed to remove the complexity of getting started with an enterprise AI project, and generative AI algorithms developed with AI Workbench can be scaled to virtually any data center, public cloud, or NVIDIA’s own DGX Cloud. Along with AI Workbench, NVIDIA released AI Enterprise 4.0, the latest version of its enterprise software platform.
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- CARPL Aids Singapore AI project: CARPL.ai’s platform has been adopted as part of a large project to promote the use of AI in the Singapore healthcare system. The country’s Synapxe health technology agency is implementing a vendor-neutral AI platform called AimSG to support the roll-out of AI models across the country, and CARPL serves as the platform for the project. The company has already successfully deployed Lunit’s Insight CXR algorithm at two major hospitals.
- Qure Supports Nigeria TB Screening: Qure.ai is supporting a tuberculosis screening program in Nigeria that pairs the company’s qXR AI algorithm with MinXray’s portable X-ray system. Operated by Caritas Nigeria, the program has doctors reviewing results on-site; patients suspected of having TB are referred for additional testing and if positive are given treatment to prevent the spread of further infection.
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How Thomas Jefferson Leveraged CARPL.ai
See how Thomas Jefferson University relied on CARPL.ai to accelerate its AI validation and clinical adoption in this presentation by informatics and AI leader, Dr. Paras Lakhani.
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Delighting Patients with Medical Image Sharing
A new platform from Clearpath now enables healthcare providers to delight their patients by sharing images and medical records digitally. Find out how it integrates simply into your practice.
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