Guest guest Posted August 18, 2011 Report Share Posted August 18, 2011 I have a question for the group. Have any of you instituted a modest non-covered benefits fee that resulted in financial (or other) disaster for your practice? Say, in the $200-300 per year range? I would still be billing insurance, as well. Here's my background...I have an ultra-low overhead, solo, family medicine practice that has been open nearly 3 years. I work from my home in rural, upstate NY, full-time, with my non-medical husband as my only (and unpaid) staff. We do our own billing and are very good at getting everything the insurance companies owe us. We participate with only decent payers, including Medicare (no UHC or Medicaid). Very few of our patients are well-off, and many are struggling, since unemployment is fairly high here. I give a discount for PIFATOS for cash-paying patients, which brings their payments down to a few dollars above Medicare's rates. I accept less from a few people who are in dire need. Some of our insured patients can't/won't pay their portion after the insurance companies pay, so we have some bad debt. We have about 540 patients and could have a lot more, but I keep putting on the brakes to new patients because I can't do all the work required to take care of them, especially when they are new. I am chatty and have a perfectionistic streak, so my visits are long and it takes me wayyyy too long to do my notes. I give super service, almost always seeing patients the day they call, and frequently in the evening or on the weekend when it seems they really need it and I am not otherwise occupied. I accept e-mail from patients, although most of mine don't use it, and they have my cell-phone number for urgent calls. I do home visits for a few who are truly home-bound. I enjoy taking care of complex patients, so I am not always sending them off to a specialist (30-45 minutes away) for every little thing. I frequently pick up and successfully manage things that the few other primary care providers in my area miss. My husband says that I give " concierge care at bargain-basement prices! " As a result, I am basically always working, but still not making enough money to cover my needs, since I went to med school late, still have med school loans, and am just finishing putting 2 children through college. I am 55 and, at the rate I am going, I honestly don't think I would be in any position to retire until I was at least 75, and 80 would be a lot safer! (For me, not the patients!!) I REALLY don't want to try to see more patients, because I feel overwhelmed already, so I am thinking about a fee to get paid some extra for this fabulous service I give. I don't think there is enough money around here to support the $1500+ annual fees of most concierge practices. Even with a much smaller fee, I realize that I will lose a lot of patients who can't or won't pay it, and I am doing the math to see at what point I will fall below what I am making now. With a $250 annual fee, I predict that I could make about the same as I am making now, with about 1/2 as many patients, and my life would be significantly better. If I kept even more patients, I could make more, which I really need. I am thinking of giving my current patients 3 months to decide whether they want to pay the fee and remain in the practice. So, do you think I will " crash and burn? " ---Sharlene Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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