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Family Doctors in US Fed Up With Insurance Hassles, Would Like to Call It Quits

by Gopalan on Nov 20 2008 11:14 AM

Family doctors and internists in US fed up with insurance hassles and would like to call it quits.

Family doctors and internists in US are fed up with insurance hassles and would like to call it quits, a survey reveals. And this segment is considered the backbone of the health industry.

In the survey conducted by the Physicians' Foundation, almost half of the primary care physicians said that they would seriously consider getting out of the medical business within the next three years if they had an alternative.

The foundation sent questionnaires to more than 270,000 primary care doctors and more than 50,000 specialists nationwide.

Of the 12,000 respondents, 49 percent said they'd consider leaving medicine. Many said they are overwhelmed with their practices, not because they have too many patients, but because there's too much red tape generated from insurance companies and government agencies.

With lower reimbursement from insurance companies and the cost of malpractice insurance skyrocketing, these health professionals say it's not worth running a practice and are changing careers. Others say they're going into so-called boutique medicine, in which they charge patients a yearly fee up front and don't take insurance.

Already over a third of those surveyed have closed their practices to Medicaid patients and 12 percent have closed their practices to Medicare patients. That can leave a lot of patients looking for a doctor.

And if many physicians do eventually opt out, that could be devastating to the health care industry.

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"We couldn't survive that," says Dr. Walker Ray, vice president of the Physicians Foundation. "We are only producing in this country a thousand to two thousand primary doctors to replace them. Medical students are not choosing primary care."

A shortage of 35,000 to 40,000 primary care physicians by 2025 was predicted at last week's American Medical Association annual meeting.

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Dr. Alan Pocinki practicing medicine for 17 years, said he was spending more time on paperwork than patients. He felt he was running a small business, instead of a practice. He says it's frustrating, CNN reported.

"I had no business training, as far as how to run a business, or how to evaluate different plans," Pocinki says. "It was a whole brave new world and I had to sort of learn on the fly."

These days he is limiting the type of insurance he will take and the number of patients on Medicare and Medicaid.

Besides med school students are shying away from family medicine. In a survey published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in September, only 2 percent of current medical students plan to take up primary care. That's because these students are wary of the same complaints that are causing existing doctors to flee primary care: hectic clinics, burdensome paperwork and systems that do a poor job of managing patients with chronic illness.

So what to do? Physicians don't have a lot of answers. But doctors say it's time to make some changes, not only in the health care field but also with the insurance industry. And they're looking to the new administration for guidance.

One of President-elect Barack Obama's health care promises is to provide a primary care physician for every American. But some health experts, including Pocinki, are skeptical.

"People who have insurance can't find a doctor, so suddenly we are going to give insurance to a whole bunch of people who haven't had it, without increasing the number of physicians?" he says. "It's going to be a problem." 

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