News

AMA: Most physicians still work in small practices


 

References

While medical practice arrangements seem to have changed dramatically over the last 30 years, the majority of physicians still work in small practices, the American Medical Association reported.

In a 2014 AMA survey, almost 61% of respondents worked in practices of 10 or fewer physicians. That’s down from the 80% reported by the AMA in 1983, but it still qualifies as majority. Over that same period, the proportion of physicians working in practices of 25 or more increased from 5% to 20%.

These changes in practice size were related to changes in practice ownership, the AMA noted. In 1983, the percentage of physicians who were the owners of their practices was 76%. In 2014, that number was 51%.

Looking at short-term data comparing the 2014 survey with one from 2012, the AMA found that the “share of physicians who worked directly for a hospital or in practices that were at least partially owned by a hospital increased from 29% in 2012 to 32.8% in 2014. Over that 2-year period, the share of physicians who were directly employed by a hospital increased from 5.6% to 7.2%, while the percentage of physicians who were in solo practice decreased from 18.4% to 17.1%, the AMA said.

rfranki@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

VIDEO: How to avoid questionable physician compensation arrangements
MDedge Neurology
Feds charge 243 in huge Medicare fraud bust
MDedge Neurology
House passes IPAB repeal bill
MDedge Neurology
Supreme Court upholds use of federal subsidies under ACA
MDedge Neurology
Vermont leads the way in marketplace enrollment
MDedge Neurology
Documenting quantity of care rather than quality
MDedge Neurology
CMS improves Open Payments system, but not enough
MDedge Neurology
Survey: Most health care organizations had a recent security breach
MDedge Neurology
CMS pledges flexibility during first year of ICD-10
MDedge Neurology
A serious catch-22 for doctors prescribing pain meds
MDedge Neurology