Physicians Foundation Survey of
Young Physicians
June 1, 2012 - A March 2012 survey of 500 young physicians by the
Physicians Foundation, a nonprofit organization
dedicated to improving the practice of medicine concluded:
“These physicians are markedly
pessimistic regarding the future of the U.Shealthcare
system, with the “new healthcare legislation” ranking as a strong #1 reason for
the pessimism. Many voice considerable cynicism with (what several call)
“government’ involvement.”
You can download the entire survey
(25 page PDF) at:
Here is an excerpt from the
Executive Summary and other sections:
A Overview
The
typical younger physician in this survey is 37 years of age and is an employee
of a medical group; with the largest single segment being employees
of small groups (6 or fewer physicians): 58% are employees of medical
groups, and almost half of those (48%) are with the smaller groups. In
contrast, 26% are with mid-sized groups (with 7 to 12 physicians), and 26%are with
larger groups (13-plus physicians).
These
physicians are markedly pessimistic regarding the future of the U.S. healthcare
system, with the “new healthcare legislation” ranking as a strongn#1 reason
for the pessimism. Many voice considerable cynicism with (what
several
call) “government’ involvement.”
Financial-related
considerations play a key role in the choice of practice/ arrangement.
Most cite “income/cash flow” and “employment security” asfactors
influencing their current arrangement. And among the 27% whochanged
(or considered changing) their practice/arrangement in the pastyear, the
leading reason given related to “financial issues.”
The vast majority express satisfaction with their
current practice /arrangement
(with 35% saying they are “highly satisfied,” and another 45%saying
they are “somewhat satisfied”); and most expect to stay with the current
practice/ arrangement for 8 years or more. Many (39%) aspire to some form
of ownership position in the future (as either sole owner or partner).
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EXCERPT
FROM PAGE 7
Views
regarding the Future of the U.S. Healthcare System
These
young physicians exhibit considerable pessimism regarding the future of
the U.S. healthcare system:
- When it
comes to the Affordable Care Act, 49% believe the impact ontheir
practice will be negative, vs. only 23% who believe it will bepositive.
Among the three practice-types, the Primary Care physicians exhibited
somewhat less pessimism vs. the other two segments: Theywere a bit
more likely to be “positive” or “neutral,” a bit less likely to be
negative.
- And well
over half (57%) are pessimistic about the future of the U.S.healthcare
system (with over 30% saying they’re “highly pessimistic”). In contrast,
only 4% are “highly optimistic,” and 18% who are “somewhat optimistic”.
When asked (open-ended) reasons for their pessimism, responses
covered a wide spectrum of negatives – with the “new healthcare
legislation” leading the way. Indeed, as one peruses theresponses
to the question, the cynicism voiced by so many – with mostof it
directed at “government” – stands out:
Why do you
feel pessimistic about the future of the U.S. Healthcare System?
“(Because
of) government involvement.”
“(I) Don’t
trust government to do the right thing for patients and physicians or to
enact lasting improvements.”
“Because
the U.S. healthcare system isn’t concerned about the employees
or patients. They’re just concerned about the money.”
“Government
control is a recipe for disaster. They cannot run a businessand cannot
control expenses. How could they do a good job onhealthcare?
It is a real joke!”
Tweet: In a
Physicians Foundation survey of 500 young physicians, 57% were pessimistic about the future of the
U.S. health system.
1 comment:
ealthcare system, with the “new healthcare legislation” ranking as a strongn#1 reason for the pessimism. Many voice considerable cynicism.
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