News

Texas Medical Association fights for independent practices


 

"The project wasn’t going all that well because we realized how complex it was to tie the groups together, even in a smaller town like Abilene," Dr. Malone said.

Since then they’ve scaled back the project, but they are still committed to testing the concept, he said.

The formation of the physician services organization in Texas is "very encouraging," said Paul B. Ginsburg, Ph.D., president of the Center for Studying Health System Change, a nonpartisan policy research organization. The question, he said, is whether the Physician Services Organization for Patient Care will be as successful in helping physicians to remain in private practice as the Independent Practice Associations (IPAs) that have developed in states like California and Massachusetts.

"I do believe that health care markets, particularly hospital markets, will be much more competitive if physicians are in physician organizations rather than hospital employees," Dr. Ginsburg said.

mschneider@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @MaryEllenNY

Pages

Recommended Reading

2014 Medicare fee proposal ponders pay for non-face-to-face work
MDedge Internal Medicine
Mammas, don't let your babies grow up to be doctors
MDedge Internal Medicine
Oral sitagliptin promising for inpatient glycemic management in type 2 diabetes
MDedge Internal Medicine
CPCI participants were off to a slow start
MDedge Internal Medicine
Disability, not death, colors Americans' health
MDedge Internal Medicine
Year 1: Pioneer ACOs deliver quality, some drop out
MDedge Internal Medicine
The Sunshine Act
MDedge Internal Medicine
Johns Hopkins named top hospital for 2013-14
MDedge Internal Medicine
GAO: In-house pathology is a conflict
MDedge Internal Medicine
Sunshine apps track industry payments
MDedge Internal Medicine