1 in 3 Physicians Plans to Quit Within 10 Years
John Commins, for HealthLeaders Media, July 27, 2012
Blaming low compensation and the hassles of healthcare reform, 34% of
physicians say they plan to leave the practice of medicine over the next
decade, according to a new national survey.
The online survey of 2,218 physicians by Atlanta-based healthcare staffing
recruiters Jackson Healthcare also found that 16% of the respondents said
they will, or are strongly considering , retiring, leaving medicine, or
going part-time in 2012.
Sheri Sorrell, market research manager for Jackson Healthcare, says many of
the essay responses from responding physicians were quite lengthy and
emotional, especially as they related their reactions to the sweeping
changes in medicine that will be brought on by healthcare reform and market
demands.
"Some doctors wrote books for us in here. A lot of them are very concerned
about the depersonalization and corporatization of medicine," Sorrell says.
"It used to be the family doctor treated your family for years basing the
decisions on what is best for you and your family. Whereas an employed
doctor not only has to take into account not only what is best for you and
your family but also what the organization will allow him to do and what the
organization's guidelines for treating you are."
Of those physicians who said they plan to retire or leave medicine this year
, 56% cited economic factors and 51% cited health reform as among the major
factors. Of those physicians who said they are strongly considering leaving
medicine in 2012, 55% or 97 physicians, were under age 55.
"That's what we were most surprised about; that the majority of the folks
that were considering leaving medicine or planning to leave medicine this
year were under 55 years old. The key takeaway is that they're not retiring;
they're quitting," Sorrell says.
The online survey was conducted between April 19-27, before the U.S. Supreme
Court's affirmation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
While most physicians in the survey panned the ACA, they often did so for
different reasons.
"They are upset on both ends of the political spectrum," Sorrell says. "
There is a certain amount of doctors who feel like the ACA went way too far
with the government stepping in between them and their patients. And the
other group says we didn't go far enough. We need a single-payer system in
this country if we are going to address the challenges of medicine. You see
both contingents and they are equally displeased. It's implement and improve
versus repeal and replace."
Sorrell says Jackson Healthcare will continue to survey physicians to see if
they make good on their threats to leave, or if they're just angry about
the overall state of healthcare delivery and compensation. "It will be
interesting to see in the coming years how this bears out; if really the
folks who are strongly considering leaving really did," she says.
The survey also found that specialists were more inclined to leave medicine
in the next decade, including:
Oncologists and hematologists — 57% said they would retire by 2022
Otolaryngologists — 49% said they would retire in the next decade
General Surgeons — 49% said they would retire by 2022
Cardiologists — 45% said they would retire in the next decade
Urologists — 42% said they would retire by 2022