| > I think perhaps you do not understand what residents do. Given my background, I understand exactly what residents do. My point still stands. Even if you don't trust the accounting numbers, you have to look at the end result. Let's assume that residency programs are, at the margin, profitable for hospitals. Let's also assume that hospitals like profit. - The statement "residency programs are profitable (at the margin) for the hospital" is logically equivalent to "increasing the number of residency slots (or programs) would be profitable for the hospital". - If increasing the number of residency slots (or programs) would be profitable for the hospital, there would be more of them. - However, there aren't - the number of self-funded residency programs has been (essentially) zero for decades. Therefore, one of our two assumptions must be wrong. Either residency programs are not, at the margin, profitable hospitals, or hospitals just like turning down profit. |
No, there are many options between 'profit' and 150k costs.
The question is can Medicare increase the number of residency's without increasing Medicare's costs. And because of the excessive number of specialists with higher associated costs the answer to that is clearly 'Yes'.
Thus, the cost of a residency slot is not inherently negative 150,000$/year. It's very possible for residency's to break even without hospitals to have any incentive to implement them, further that 150k/year provides profit even with the current mix.