Docs: Primary care takes too much time for too little money

Why is the doctor "out" for millions of Americans?
Family doctors and experts say there are not enough primary care doctors for two main reasons: time and money.
Despite widespread calls for each American to have a primary care doctor, neither government programs like Medicare and Medicaid nor private insurance generally pays doctors for quarterbacking patient care, or pay for visits addressing multiple medical issues.
Family doctors, pediatricians and general practitioners end up being paid less, because the reimbursement system assumes what they do is less complex than specialists.
With an aging population of patients, at least half with one or more chronic conditions and a growing list of recommended preventive care, good primary care takes a lot of time, both from the doctor and support staff.
Yet primary care doctors often earn $150,000 or less a year, about half as much as specialists.
Not surprisingly, only about 7 percent of medical students in a recent survey said they were pursuing primary care, especially when they graduate with an average debt of $140,000.
Physician dissatisfaction with primary care is high. The Physicians Foundation found that most family docs are unhappy with their long hours, high patient loads and relatively low pay. Few would recommend their field to new doctors, and only 40 percent would choose their career path again if they could do it over.
"It's the tyranny of the 15-minute visit. You come into your practice in the morning and you see you have 12 to 15 15-minute visits in the morning and another 12 to 15 15-minute visits in the afternoon, and you know you can't do it all in 15 minutes,'' said Dr. Thomas Bodenheimer, a primary care expert at the University of California-San Francisco.
The impacts are widespread:
- Many busy offices are trying to keep up with patient demand by hiring physician assistants or nurse practitioners to handle appointments.
- Some, frustrated by no-shows and unrealistic scheduling, have abandoned appointments entirely, just letting patients walk in first come, first served.
- Family medicine is aging. A third of family physicians are 55 and older, and many are winding down their practices.
- The Physicians Foundation survey found that 49 percent of primary care doctors said they expect to reduce the number of patients they see, or stop practicing entirely, within the next three years.
- Family medicine is feminizing. The majority of new primary care doctors are women -- a third of the total and soon to be two thirds. Female doctors are more likely to seek limited work hours or part-time practices to accommodate their children.
- Many younger doctors, male and female, reject a lifestyle that requires working 60 to 80 hours a week and being on-call.
"There's a lot of demoralized people in the trenches, and a lot of young doctors are wondering if they want to go into primary care or stay in it,'' said Dr. Ted Epperly, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians. "A lot of them are choosing more lucrative, less demanding paths in and out of medicine."

(E-mail Lee Bowman at bowmanl(at)shns.com. Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, http://www.scrippsnews.com)
With DOCS-SHORTAGE

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I'm a 3rd year med student at a state school known for good primary care, yet only 16% of my class said it would consider ANY primary field, including Family Med, General Med, or OB. Of that 16% most had other career interests they said they were also considering. Many people in my class are also taking non-traditional paths like MD/PhD, MD/JD, MD/MBA, MD/HCA that are unlikely to land anywhere near primary care.
The reason why?? Med school costs 28k a year and you work 40-80h weeks plus study, leaving little or no time for outside jobs, meaning another 20k a year for living expenses, travel, and books. Tag on an average 30k of undergrad debt (it takes 3-4 years of undergrad and usually a degree to get into med school) also tag on 10K for residency interview flights and hotels and you get 232K of debt, which with current crappy loan terms are between 4-8%. Once you get out of med school you still have residency, which is 3-9years of 50-80K a year for 60-80 hours a week (approx 17$ an hour-I made 12$ working as a casher with no degree before med school). Most doctors are in their mid to late 30's before they generate significant income and can pay down their loans which at 7% after 6years would be 373K. Now also consider that other 4year college professionals might get 16$ an hour right out of school and get promoted to 25$ an hour within 4 years, and Doctors have an additional 138K of potential time/money invested in med school and 233K invested in residency--so by these figures a person has to invest an equivalent 744K to become a doctor, also as he isn't making much money until 35ish often doctors choose to delay life-marriage, children, saving for retirement, buying a house-until he's done with his education. Is it any wonder physicians are rejecting lower paying specialties and griping about reimbursement? Primary care pays someone with 10-15years of higher education/on the job training 150K a year, and in underserved areas and academia even less. So unless you can go into a specialty that pays 300-400k a year medicine not a great career choice from a financial perspective—if the government wants to fix healthcare, they need to look to loan forgiveness, or medical school grants, or better reimbursements, or lower tort caps and malpractice, not socialism. With the socialist path we are now on we’ll have a country where everyone is covered, but can’t actually get an appointment. The only reason Europe is able to do socialized medicine is free or subsidized med school, 40h physician workweek, negligible malpractice, no college requirement for medical school, and a healthier population and lifestyle than America.

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