Practice Economics

Nearly three-quarters of physician specialties saw compensation increases in 2015 – AMGA


 

References

Seventy-four percent of physician specialties saw increases in their compensation in 2015, led by emergency medicine, according to the American Medical Group Association.

Overall, the weighted average increase in median compensation across all physician specialties was 3.1%, according to the 2016 Medical Group Compensation and Productivity Survey. Results were based on responses from 260 medical groups representing more than 92,000 providers.

thinkstockphotos.com

“Once again, we see that physician compensation in general has remained relatively flat, with an average increase around 3.0%,” AMGA President and CEO Donald Fisher, PhD, said in a statement.

“We’ve seen peaks in certain specialties, and dips in others, and much of this reflects the cyclical nature of health care economics,” he added. For example, data from the 2014 survey saw gastroenterology had the largest year-over-year increase and in the 2016 survey, it was one of four specialties to see a decrease in compensation.

Individual specialties seeing the largest median total compensation increase year over year include emergency medicine (9.65% to $355,280), cardiac/thoracic surgery (8.12% to $645,112), cardiology (6.88% to $483.653), and hypertension and nephrology (6.72% to $329,750). Total compensation captures base and variable compensation plus all voluntary salary reductions, but excludes fringe benefits and employer payments to any type of retirement, pension, SERP or tax-deferred profit-sharing plan.

Four specialties saw median decreases in their compensation, including dermatology (–4.27% to $434,520), ophthalmology (–4.17% to $385,149), cardiology-cath lab (–0.81% to $584,118), and gastroenterology (–0.16% to $505,194).

gtwachtman@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Lessons learned from merging EHR systems
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Feds sue to block mega-mergers by health insurers
MDedge Emergency Medicine
CMS seeks input on future of Open Payments program
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Different approaches can combat negative online reviews
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Hemophilia guideline recommends integrated care model
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Interhospital patient transfers must be standardized
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Medicaid expansion leads to better access to care
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Mayo Clinic tops hospital rankings for 2016-2017
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Most physician practices unsure about joining ACOs
MDedge Emergency Medicine
FBI questions legality of telemedicine compact laws
MDedge Emergency Medicine