ConsultantLive Members: Login | Register
 |  |
ConsultantLive SearchMedica Medline Drugs

Powered by SearchMedica

 
About Us
Blogs
Dermclinic
Photoclinic
Pediatric Center
Multimedia
Topics
What's Your Diagnosis?
 

Home » Health Care Reform

 

Radiology Resolutions for the New Year

By Eric Postal. MD | January 4, 2013

As 2013 kicks off, are you vowing to lose weight? Stop smoking? Be more charitable?

Let’s be honest. You’ve been resolving to do this stuff year after year, and yet here you are again. These noble plans might feel slightly more achievable in late December, but usually all they manage to do is get the year off to a lousy start by handing you your first round of failures.

(MORE: Don't Watch This Space)

Let’s focus on more realistic targets, shall we? Fortunately, health care — and radiology in particular — has no shortage of outside influences telling us how we’ll be spending the ensuing months:

I resolve to read more studies. Not for more compensation. Not because there will magically be more hours in the day to get the work done. And not because distracters will be removed.

We’ve been assured that dropping reimbursements will be counterbalanced by millions more insured patients in the populace, and that these folks will be increasingly seen by nurses and PAs because there just won’t be enough physicians to do the job. And those physician-extenders statistically order more studies (you decide why that is). More work, less budget, stable or declining number of radiologists — you do the math.

I resolve to be more responsible. It’s no news that there’s an ever-increasing push to hold rads accountable for more than making findings on imaging studies, and even to spell out how and to whom results get communicated. Inroads are being made, as you read this, to require specific phrasing in your reports — density of breast tissue, for instance.

Next up is the government’s grand plan to “vertically stratify” us into ACOs, the latest incarnation of capitation — meaning that there’ll be a finite amount of funding per patient, parceled out to the health care system tending said patient. If costs exceed allocated funding… too bad for the ACO and its members! This is punishment to them for not being efficient enough (forget about silly things beyond their control, like patient noncompliance or plain ol’ bad luck). As the radiologist who read the films diagnosing somebody’s pneumonia, you will actually be held financially responsible for its treatment and outcome.

I resolve to complain less. Well before ACA (the health care “reform” law) came along, there were things to be non-ecstatic about in medicine. Even if we weren’t particularly vocal, family and friends tended to ask us, as representatives of the profession, about our experiences in it and thoughts regarding the future. Such conversations got more frequent as we saw the ACA taking shape in… suboptimal ways.

We may have felt a sense of urgency to get the word out before it was too late, so that maybe damage could be averted (or, heaven forbid, improvements actually made). Near as I can tell, such discussions had no impact on the politicians, administrators, and lawyers deciding our fate. At most, a vocal physician was painted as a “downer” or even a “disruptive” individual if she or he was talkative enough in the wrong setting. Who needs that? Besides, there are more satisfying uses for one’s energy than yelling into the wind.

I resolve to laugh more. This will be easier if you remember to include laughter of the hollow, bitter, sarcastic, and derisive varieties.
 

 

Join the Conversation

Want to join the conversation? If you're a healthcare professional, we'd like to hear your comments. Just sign in or register today to become part of our growing, online community.

Related Articles

A Radiologist’s New Year’s Resolutions, Revisited

Radiology Resolutions for the New Year

A Radiologist’s New Year’s Resolutions

More by Eric Postal, MD

The Health Care Tax/Penalty Panacea

Avoiding the Misfortunes of Those Being Imaged

Radiology Dreams

Fighting for Truth, Justice, and the Radiological Way

Rads Ahoy: Envisioning a Medical Cruise

Giving Positive Feedback

Eliminate the Non-essential Health Care Positions

The Tales of Two Telerads: Drs. Doofus and Valiant

More Radiology Report Requirements

SOS Syndrome

Why Is Medical Fiction So Entertaining for Docs?

Radiologist Burnout: What’s Cooking You?

Patient Safety Reporting Proposal is All Stick, No Carrot

Defensive Dictation in Radiology

Learned Helplessness, Learned Hopelessness

Calling with Critical Findings: Is Anybody Out There?

Radiology Resolutions for the New Year

Let’s Rewrite the Rules

The Radiology of Grocery Shopping

Some Additions to the Annual H&P Paperwork

Tried, Judged, and Condemned

Don't Watch This Space






 
TOPIC INDEX

Asthma

Atrial Fibrillation

Cardiovascular

Cerebrovascular

Developmental/Genetic

Diabetes

Diabetes Type 2

Fibromyalgia

Geriatrics

GI Disorders

Gout

Health Care Reform

HIV/AIDS

Hypertension

Infection

Mental Health

 

Musculoskeletal

Nervous System

Nutritional/Metabolic 

Otorhinolaryngologic 

Pain

Pediatrics

Physical Abuse

Respiratory Tract 

Rheumatic Diseases

Seasonal Allergies

Skin Diseases

Sleep Disorders

Urologic Diseases

Vaccines

Women’s Health

All Topics

 


 
FROM PHYSICIANS PRACTICE
Key Differences between FQHCs and RHCs
Chastity Werner, RHIT, June 13, 2013
FQHCs and RHCs take up a unique niche among physician practices. And that affects compensation and billing.
Improving Care Coordination in Your Practice
Susanne Madden,  June 12, 2013
Practices are feverishly working to control the rising costs of healthcare - effective care coordination can help.
Refunding Overpayments: Two Options for Medical Practices
Ericka L. Adler,  June 12, 2013
Medicare and Medicaid providers must return overpayments once identified. Here are two different refund approaches for practices to consider when necessary.
Four Easy Ways to Boost Patient Time of Service Collections
Aubrey Westgate,  June 12, 2013
Simple ways your medical practice staff can increase the likelihood patients will pay when presenting for appointments.
iPad Alternatives for Mobile Physicians
Marisa Torrieri, June 11, 2013
As more physicians are seeing the merits of media tablets, the market is expanding, too.
 

 

 
MOST POPULAR
  • Most Popular
  • Most Emailed
  • Most Recent
  • Painful Red Ear
  • Facial Skin Problems—A Photo Essay
  • Go For The Glory Quiz: Persistent Oral Lesions, Nevus or Melanoma?, Altered Mental Status in Middle Age, An Itchy, Scaly Rash, Painful Blisters of the Hand
  • Scaly Plaque on the Nose
  • T-Wave Inversions: Sorting Through the Causes
  • Tuberculosis Diagnosis With Handheld Device
  • Physician, First Do No Harm—To Yourself
  • Making the Most of Antihypertensive Drug Combinations
  • Why Doctors Commit Suicide
  • Superficial Abrasion After a Fall From a Bicycle
  • Women Underrepresented in Antiretroviral Clinical Trials
  • Crohn’s Disease: New Scoring System Predicts Mild Disease
  • Iron-deficiency Anemia in IBD: These Patients Need Primary Care
  • Statins Plus Exercise: New Study Questions the Combination
  • Benign Congenital Nevus
Click here to subscribe to our newsletter
 
COMMENTS
  • Most Commented
  • Most Recent
  • Nodular Basal Cell Carcinoma
  • Short on Physicians, Long on Adverse Effects
  • Wanted: Physician Feedback on Medical Cannabis
  • Why Doctors Commit Suicide
  • Crusted Scabies
  • Scaly Plaque on the Nose
  • Short on Physicians, Long on Adverse Effects
  • Furuncle Caused by Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) Infection
  • Resistant Hypertension: Four Pearls for Your Practice
  • Nodular Basal Cell Carcinoma
Click here to subscribe to our newsletter


 
SearchMedica Search Result

Find peer-reviewed literature and websites for practicing medical professionals

CME on Health Care Reform
Evidence on Health Care Reform
Guidelines on Health Care Reform
Patient Education on Health Care Reform
Clinical Trials on Health Care Reform
Practical Articles on Health Care Reform
Research and Reviews on Health Care Reform
All "Health Care Reform" results



CancerNetwork | ConsultantLive | Diagnostic Imaging | Musculoskeletal Network | OBGYN.net | PediatricsConsultantLive |
Physicians Practice | Psychiatric Times | SearchMedica | Medical Resources

© 1996 - 2013 UBM Medica LLC, a UBM company
Privacy Statement - Terms of Service - Advertising Information - Editorial Policy Statement - UBM Medica Network Privacy Policy