You know, I am going to talk frankly to you all as a physician. I am seriously thinking of quitting the part of my practice that involves visiting patients in Nursing homes. The reason is simply this. I am employed by the hospital to which I admit patients. I am paid a salary, like alot of the rest of you are. When I visit a patient at a nursing home, I net something like $10/visit, after all contractural allowances and discounts are taken, which goes to the hospital, which in turn pays my salary. But, it costs me $10 for the round trip from my home to the hospital or nursing home. Plus, I have to pay for child care for my son. I try to consolidate trips--nursing home is across the street from the hospital. But, I already work normally about 12 hrs per work day just with hospital and outpatient, and I have to pick up my son at aftercare at school by 6 pm. I don't get paid extra for overtime to visit people at the nursing home, so I do it on my day off. But, I have to clean my house, do my laundry, mow my lawn, etc, on my day off. I don't get paid any more if I use my day off to see patients at the nursing home. I used to pay somebody to clean my house--it was about $150/wk. It would probably cost about the same to hire somebody to mow the lawn and do the landscaping that I do for "free". I still have very little "recreation" time, unless you consider cleaning house, doing laundry, pulling weeds or mowing the lawn "recreation".
When I was self employed, the hospital charged each of the doctors in my office about $1800/mo for rent. We have 6 doctors. $1800 is more than my mortgage, and some months, I was barely able to pay my mortgage. So, now I am employed, and the hospital gets the proceeds from my patient visits, and I get money to live on. Apparently, Cleveland Clinic is trying to recoop the rent they used to get from physicians in private practice. I don't think that the doctors are getting any more or any less from this charge. So any venom directed toward doctors because of the greed of the insurance companies and health care administrators is misdirected.