Doctors going broke, and declaring bankruptcy? If lowered
third party reimbursements, and cash paying patients becoming extinct is not
enough….Here comes Obamacare! It’s going to be ugly! Physicians will make less
and less, patients will have longer waits and higher premiums, and malpractice
lawyers will be laughing all the way to the bank!
Doctors driven
to bankruptcy
NEW YORK (CNNMoney)
As many doctors struggle to keep
their practices financially sound, some are buckling under money woes
and being pushed into bankruptcy.
It's a trend that's accelerated in recent years, industry
experts say, with potentially serious consequences for doctors and patients.
Some physicians are still able to keep practicing after bankruptcy, but for
others, it's a career-ending
event. And when a practice shuts its doors, patients can find it
harder to get the health care they need nearby.
Chapter 11 bankruptcy filings by physician practices spiked in
March, noted Bobby Guy, co-chair of the American Bankruptcy Institute's health
care committee. "Eight filings in three weeks is very unusual," said
Guy.
Five years ago, Plantation, Fla.-based bankruptcy attorney David
Langley didn't have a single doctor as a client. Since then he's handled at
least six bankruptcy cases involving doctors. Two current clients -- an
orthopedic surgeon and an OB/GYN -- also are in bankruptcy.
None of his physician clients had malpractice lawsuits that
landed them in dire financial straits. All are "top-notch doctors,"
he said.
The weak economy has taken a toll on doctors' revenue, as
consumers cut back on office visits and lucrative elective procedures, said
Guy, a bankruptcy attorney in Nashville with Frost Brown Todd LLC.
Doctors also blame shrinking insurance
reimbursements, changing regulations, and the rising costs of
malpractice insurance, drugs and other business necessities for making it
harder to keep their practices
afloat.
Oncologist Dr. Dennis Morgan had a profitable solo practice in
Enfield, Conn., for years. Revenues began to fall, he said, when reimbursements
for treatment and drugs to oncologists started shrinking. He made cutbacks, but
he began having trouble meeting expenses, and his business debt grew. Critical
chemotherapy drug and medical supplies providers "eventually cut me
off," Morgan said.
In June 2011, his practice, in a medically underserved area,
filed for bankruptcy. It had hundreds of chemotherapy patients at the time.
For the next two years, his role became "that of a captain
of a sinking ship managing the allocation of life boats until rescue
arrived," he said. He redirected patients to other doctors and area
hospitals. Early last year, he stopped practicing medicine.
Having a cancer practice close can be "debilitating"
to a community, said Morgan. "If you have to travel one or two hours to
get treatment and you have no one to go with you, it becomes a matter of
getting care or not getting care," he said.
Primary care
doctors face similar challenges. Langley recounts one client, a
solo practitioner in an underserved area of Broward County, Fla., whose patients
were mostly on Medicare
or lacked insurance.
As the economy worsened in the wake of the recession, fewer
patients could afford to come in. Cash payments and reimbursements dropped. To
come up with money to keep the practice going, she took a second job at a
hospital. Still, her debt ballooned. She fell behind on state tax
payments.
Two years ago, Florida tax officials showed up at her door to
shut the clinic down. She quickly called Langley and he was able to file an
emergency bankruptcy for her online while the officials were still in the
waiting room. He gave them the bankruptcy case number, and they left without
closing the clinic. Langley eventually helped the doctor restructure her debt
and the clinic is still open, he said.
Dr. Morgan Moor was on the brink of bankruptcy in 2011. An
internist with a solo practice in Brentwood, Tenn., Moor said the recession
badly hurt her once-thriving practice. By 2010, she had lost almost half of her
active patients, her annual revenue had dropped nearly 30%, and she had to lay
off half her employees.
"We were told that bankruptcy was our only option,"
she said. So she hired Guy. Luckily, Moor said, she was able to restructure her
debt and her business without filing.
Every day since has been a struggle, though. "Every
payroll, I wonder if we will be able to keep doing this," she said.
"I try not to think about it because it paralyzes me with fear”.
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