If hospitals don't have the revenue, they should charge the cost of services to balance their books.
I think government involvement in the residency program is problematic distortion, causing hospitals to chase a scarce resource instead of working to expand the supply pipeline.
This is not a free market and you won't accomplish anything by telling hospitals what they "should" do. Prices are largely fixed by Medicare/Medicaid reimbursement rates. Whenever prices are fixed, shortages are pretty much inevitable.
Relying on Medicare to pay for residency programs isn't an ideal situation. But the reality is that there are no other major players in the system with both the money and incentive to cover those costs. That won't change without a complete restructuring of the entire system, and achieving the political consensus to do that will be extremely difficult.
If you have a few million dollars to spare then feel free to donate it to your local teaching hospital. They'll be happy to take your money to expand their residency program. There is an opportunity for philanthropists to do some real good in reducing the physician shortage.
I dont think I agree. Medicare/medicaid rates change constantly. The cost of retaining physicians is part of cost of providing healthcare, so there is no reason to carve it out. Hospitals have a natural incentive to have doctors on staff. The only reason they dont have incentive today is because there is someone else taking on the cost.
I would argue that it is easier and more realistic to simply include it in the price than expect congress accurately predict future demand, and continually pass legislation to that effect. We dont need a congressional act to subsidize hospital janitors- Somehow hospitals figure out how to include them in their operational expenses because they need them.
Furthermore, it wouldnt break the bank of most of these hospitals. Take one of the largest teaching hospitals in the world, Cleveland clinic, with 2000 residents. at typical resident grant of 100k, that is 200 million. The Cleavland clinic annual revenue is >13 Billion.
That is not a realistic or sensible proposal. Only a subset of hospitals do graduate medical education. If teaching hospitals raised their prices to cover the overhead of residency programs then that would put them at a competitive disadvantage relative to hospitals that don't train residents at all. In order to keep residency programs financially sustainable there has to be a separate revenue source.
Cleveland Clinic is a non-profit. Their total revenue is irrelevant. If you'd like them to spend an extra $200M on their residency program then they would have to spend less on other stuff. Take a look at their financial statements and then you can tell them exactly where they ought to cut back in order to fund your proposal. Please be specific.
Of course their revenue is relevant? IF they can stack 2 billion per year onto their endowment every year, they could spend 200 million on residents.
That is my specific proposal. If they refuse to raise prices, then they should grow the endowment by 200 million less per year and provide the same services. It is bad enough that a non-profit charges 20% more than the cost of their services. They would be fine if they were only making 18% more than their costs.
It is basicity the same as if Harvard college claimed it cant afford to train teachers aids while charging students more than enough to cover expenses and sitting on a 50 billion endowment that grows ever larger each year.
> We dont need a congressional act to subsidize hospital janitors- Somehow hospitals figure out how to include them in their operational expenses because they need them.
Observation that the lead/training time for additional hospital janitors is a couple weeks.
My point was with respect to billing, and the idea that hospitals couldn't use revenue to pay for residents and offset their cost. The idea that medicare costs are "fixed" and doesn't include residents is besides the point. Hence, medicare doesn't janitors, but hospitals figure out a way to pay them as an operational expense
I think government involvement in the residency program is problematic distortion, causing hospitals to chase a scarce resource instead of working to expand the supply pipeline.