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Call responsibilities
Sise, Mike MD Sise.Mike at scrippshealth.orgThu Dec 6 13:39:13 GMT 2007
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Whether you are at a University, a public hospital, or a private hospital, where there is money paid there is respect for your services on the part of the medical center administration. If they don't pay you properly, they aren't giving you the respect you are due. Get your hands on the financial performance data for the trauma service. How much is your service making or losing for your medical center? If trauma is making money then they need to pay you appropriately for your contributions to the bottom line. If trauma is losing money, then show them a package of cost savings and get rewarded for it. These are business people, they pay industry partners for this type of deal all the time! Find out how much other centers (private centers too if you are a University or public hospital) are paying their trauma surgeons, specialty call panels, and medical directors. Ask for fair market value for your services. If you're the trauma medical director working 50 to 60 hours a week putting out fires, teaching, developing practice guidelines, meeting with disruptive staff, etc., and they are not paying you the full time equivalent administrative salary allowed by Medicare/CMS ($240,000) or a reasonable university equivalent, you are being taken for granted. Get on their case to pay you fairly. Don't get angry. Never attribute to malice that which is due to ignorance or lack of focus. Get even - fair pay for services and a sustainable growth in compensation based on performance. It takes one hell of a lot of work to achieve this kind of relationship with the medical center's administration. I don't see that we have any alternative. Mike Sise San Diego ________________________________ From: Jeffrey Hammond [mailto:hammond at umdnj.edu] Sent: Wed 12/5/2007 6:55 AM To: Trauma & Critical Care mailing list Cc: trauma-list at trauma.org Subject: Re: Call responsibilities Wow! This reply was a real pick-me-up. We (Trauma/CC) often feel taken for granted and "K" has certainly put our skill sets into perspective. I feel better about myself already! Jeff Hammond ----- Original Message ----- From: KMATTOX at aol.com Date: Tuesday, December 4, 2007 8:51 pm Subject: Re: Call responsibilities To: trauma-list at trauma.org > > In a message dated 12/4/2007 6:09:05 P.M. Central Standard > Time, > rgross at harthosp.org writes: > > Ken, > > When can I start as an attending on your service - it > might take me a day or > so to move, but I am available after that! ;-) > > Ron > > > > > Ron: Thank you for volunteering to be a faculty with > us. We are not at > the level of understanding or support that I cited in my > letter. I wanted to > share with this list server what is happening across the > country, often > quietly. I am aware of at least > one hospital that is paying surgeons and > neurosurgeons $5000 per 12 hour shift to take call from > home. FROM HOME. > > The numbers and principles I cited are probably LOW compared to > the VALUE to > the rest of the hospital and especially to the rest of the > surgical > services. It is important that every acute care, > emergency, trauma, general surgeon > understand their worth, leverage, and benefit to patients > and the rest of > the health care enterprise. DO NOT > UNDERSELL yourself or allow yourselves > to be USED. > > You have many values and benefits to patients, other doctors, > hospitals, and > to society. > > 1. Your TIME is very valuable. > Your "call pay" is to pay you for YOUR > TIME, just as lawyers, and many other professionals are > paid for their time. > You get paid just for being there. > PERIOD. You should never do this > physical presence just for free. > The value for this time for the many things > you do for the community, hospital enterprise can be estimated > and supported > to be from $100.00 to (in some instances) more than > $300.00 per hour. Your > hospital administrator knows that very well from his > allocation analyses. > The CFO of your HMO knows your value very very well, they > just do not want > you to know as most acute care, trauma, emergency, general > surgeons have > allowed themselves to be painted into a corner and forced > to accept a far too low > stipend. > > 2. Your SERVICES and EXPERTESE are becoming > very rare. The number of > acute care, emergency, trauma, general surgeons who > are very comfortable and > effective in an open neck, chest, abdomen, or groin is > decreasing daily. > This person is the bedrock of the medical establishment of > EVERY community. > For a community to not have such a person, is a very > unfortunate community. > Your payment for these services can calculated many > ways, AND MUST NOT > EVER BE DISCOUNTED or compared to simpler laparoscopic or > endoscopic or > uncomplicated technical repetitive > tasks. The fee schedule for these > services is > more like the fee for services amounts of the 1980s than the > double > discounted Medicare level, $0.30 on the Dollar voodoo health > payments of HMOs, > government plans, and salary arrangements. > > 3. Your understanding of SYSTEMS approaches > and DISASTER availability to > your community is unparalleled. You are the > foundation of survival. This > fact is well known by your local EOC and stage > agencies. NO ONE ELSE but > you are literally available 24/7 for the entire community, > and can do > everything needed for such responses and as history has > shown, have been there when > society and civilization needed you. > > I am so proud to know so many of you who are among the best > clinicians in > the world. I would be happy to hire many of > you, but in a different battle, > the money available to physicians may be sparse for the > next few months. I > have drawn a line in the sand regarding the proposed > Congressional Medicare > cuts of 10.1% to physicians and have many other physicians > nationally that > have made the same personal decision and communicated such > to Congress. I am > sick and tired of the perennial charade of doing at the > edge adjustments of > partial fixes of the proposed Medicare cuts by congress > only to discover that > the payments to doctors continues to decrease, while every > other payment > from Medicare increases. > Obscene. > > SO, I have stated that I am opposed to ANY > congressional "fix" to the > proposed 10.1% Medicare payment to doctors. Just > leave it where it is and let > the chips fall where they may, and let everyone let CMS > know just how broken > the system really is. If > these issues were in my hospital, it would > immediately be declared a sentinel event and a search for > a root cause would be > screamed. > > Kenneth Mattox, MD > Houston > > > > **************************************Check out AOL's list of > 2007's hottest > products. > (http://money.aol.com/special/hot-products- > 2007?NCID=aoltop00030000000001)-- > trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG > To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: > http://www.trauma.org/index.php?/community/ "Scripps Information Security" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This e-mail and any files transmitted with it may contain privileged and confidential information and are intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to which they are addressed. If you are not the intended recipient or the person responsible for delivering the e-mail to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination or copying of this e-mail or any of its attachment(s) is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please immediately notify the sending individual or entity by e-mail and permanently delete the original e-mail and attachment(s) from your computer system. Thank you for your cooperation. ============================================================================== -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/ms-tnef Size: 10666 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://list.mistral.net/pipermail/trauma-list/attachments/20071206/b9b99b19/attachment.bin
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