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by jacobrobbins
3132 days ago
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I was confused by that part too because the article goes on to say teaching colleges "have an incentive to offer residencies in specialties from which they can get the most revenue per resident." My guess is the 150K number ignores the revenue contribution of the residents (which must be significant because they carry out a significant amount of the work that requires a doctor at a hospital) I did a google search and found one article that seems to confirm this: "Whether the programs are ultimately costs or moneymakers for hospitals is mostly unknown. Expenses tied directly to the programs are tracked, but overall cost-benefit accounting that would take into account such things as savings or lower medical bills for patients from the use of lower-paid residents instead of practicing physicians isn't done." http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20150719/news/307199... The argument that federal funding is the only way to create more educational "seats" for doctors seems strange since the article claims they are paid much more than other fields, and is not really laid out well in the article. |
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This is talking about the cost-benefit from a societal perspective, not from the accounting perspective of the hospital. From an accounting or business perspective, it's pretty clear that residency programs don't make money for hospitals.
An easy way to reason about this is to remember that nothing's stopping hospitals from opening up residency slots that they self-fund. If residency programs predictably broke even, you'd expect them to do that. Except, almost no hospital does this, because the programs don't predictably break even - in fact, they pretty predictably lose money.