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Interviewing for Setting Up Practice

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  • #16
    Partnership up just for "doing"?? Sounds sketchy, but my dh is a pathologist, so what do I know?

    As far as finding a lawyer: ask other residents and "newer" attendings. We found one in Cleveland who is an MD/JD and ONLY represents physicians. That part is priceless (good thing, too, b/c he charged an arm and a leg).

    Comment


    • #17
      We were very fortunate to have a family member that specializes in contract law.

      A good resource ask the docs at the hospital dh is at now. I know that quite a few docs looked over Matt's contract prior to him signing it to ensure that Matt wasn't getting himself into any sticky situations or there weren't questions Matt hadn't asked. A good place to start would be to ask some attendings for a good attorney.

      Crystal
      Gas, and 4 kids

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      • #18
        Re:

        I just found this....CAN someone please repost this with a sticky in the jobs section? Thank you very much!


        Originally posted by Amiens
        Here are the questions. I am sure you could tailor questions to suit your specialty needs- such as How many total anestetics per year, you could change to you number of cases, number of patients, etc. It definitely opened our eyes up to issues we hadn't even thought about while in residency.

        Hope this helps,

        Crystal

        Get a Job!
        A short pocket guide to evaluating your new (prospective) job
        Moeed Azam, M.D.





        *The Practice *
        How many total anesthetics per year?
        How many anesthetizing locations?
        How many hospitals/surgicenters? How far apart are they? Do you have to travel to multiple sites in the same day?
        How many practitioners? Partner Anesthesiologists, Non-partner anesthesiologists, locums, CRNA’s, AA’s.
        Is everyone collegial?
        Are CRNA’s and AA’s under the group or the hospital?
        Where is their income (and loyalty) derived from?
        Has the number of providers been stable over past few years?
        How many are planning on retiring?
        Any major turnover? If so, for what reason?
        Plans to expand or downsize?
        Has there been difficulty in attracting CRNA’s or AA’s due to a tight market?
        What is their income level?
        What is the case load? Trauma, OB, Neuro, Vascular, Thoracic, Peds,
        NICU, Chronic and Acute Pain, Outpatient/Sameday, Regional, Ortho, Office based, Remote (radiology, endoscopy, etc)
        Will you be asked to work in any division/area more than others? Is there a commensurate difference in reimbursement for differences in work hours?
        Technical support? Lines, turnover, re-stocking supplies, drips for
        cardiac or VT.
        What is the average set up time, average turnaround time between cases? Where does the technical support staff’s income come from?
        What about technical equipment specialists for airway, anesthesia machine, monitors, etc?
        Is the equipment/technology up to date?
        Is there an experienced practice manager? Business officer? Someone
        skilled at compliance issues?
        What is the overall income trend over the past few years? Any changes on the horizon with the hospital, managed care, payor mix, etc.?

        Overall, during the visit you must talk with as many people as
        possible, including support, CRNA, locum, etc. And most importantly remember, your goal is to win the job first, and then see if it’s an offer you want to keep.

        *Day-to-day *
        Do your own cases or supervise? What is the usual medical direction
        ratio?
        Are there residents or CRNA students? How many rooms do you ever cover at once?
        Are there floaters to get you out for a break or to eat?
        What is a typical day like?
        Is there an even distribution of cases?
        Do surgeons pick who they want to work with?
        Is there “new guy” scut with undesirable cases?
        Do you do inpatient pre-op’s? How well are outpatients pre-op’ed?
        Does anyone feel undue pressure not to cancel/postpone a case due to poor pre-op workup?
        What is the relationship with the surgeons?
        Other duties: follow your own acute pain patients, post-op epidurals, floor codes, etc,?
        On call arrangements- In house versus at home?
        Trauma, OB?
        Do you have to live a certain distance from the hospital because of home call arrangements?
        Late schedule?
        Back-up?
        How often do you get called in? How is the call schedule made up? Who gets priority?
        Can you “buy” or “sell” call?
        What happens post-call?
        How often do you have to work post call?
        -----------------------------------------------------------------------
        *Page 2*

        *Partnership *
        What is the structure – corporation, partnership, limited liability
        company, limited liability partnership? There are large differences in your liability, tax/benefit issues, and governance structure.
        Average age of partners?
        When was the last time someone made partner?
        When was the last time someone on the partnership track was rejected? Why? Can you contact these individuals?
        How is partnership achieved?
        What is the voting arrangement?
        Do some have more votes?
        Are there different classes of ownership interest?
        Is there an imbalance of power?
        All groups have some factions/divisions. For example, cardiac vs. peds,
        FMG vs. US grads, older partners vs. young associates. Is there an unhealthy relationship between the different factions in the group or in-fighting?
        Do the partners have too many privileges such as: choice of cases, different work schedule, lighter weekly hours, better vacation schedule, less call, no weekend call, priority for holidays?

        Buy-in
        1. Outright cash outlay to purchase partnership stock, ownership if
        Physical facilities, etc.
        2. Sweat equity, or the amount of money your labor is worth.
        One way to evaluate different practices with different time frames and
        incomesthe years to partnership) x (income difference of avg partner vs non-partner)
        For example: Three years to partnership, Avg partners make 350,000 and avg salary during first three years is 200,000…then you have an effective “buy in” of 3 x 150,000 = $450,000.

        *Financial Stability *
        Look up the hospital with American Hospital Directory at AHD.com. It
        will give you all the financial details including total revenue, profits, and losses.

        Who does the billing?
        What is the annual accounts receivable?
        Has the revenue been increasing or decreasing?
        What percentage is Medicare? More importantly what about
        Medicaid? They may actually take a loss on those cases. Managed care
        contracts?

        *Politics *
        How does the group stand with the rest of the hospital? Are there any
        members who have served politically important roles in the hospital administration? Is there representation on various hospital committees? Are there any competing anesthesia providers in the system? How long has the group had a good relationship with the hospital? Has there
        ever been a total restructuring of the group or replacement with another group?

        *Benefits *
        Overall package can be worth over $50K (malpractice, disability, health, and retirement),so factor that into the salary offered.
        Retirement
        Profit sharing - when are you allowed to start participating and how
        long till vested 401K
        Money purchase pension plans
        Vacation, sick leave, maternity/paternity – what is allowed? What
        happens if you don’t use it all?
        CME, conference travel, time for educational activities
        Employee perks – parking, memberships in professional associations

        *Page 3*

        *Contracts *
        General Points
        Everything discussed needs to be in specific writing
        Attachments need to be /incorporated into the text of the contract by
        reference/ and attached. Include things like formulas to calculate compensation, outline of benefits, specific policies and procedures guides, Important items need to survive termination of the agreement with specific mention in the contract –e.g., access to medical records once you left the group. Watch for limits on your access or burdensome requirements or costs. This could be difficult if you leave the group and need to access records for a suit, for example.

        Specific definitions of all terms. Everything needs to be specifically
        defined – e.g., “providing anesthesia services”…does that include pain and ICU? Don’t presume ordinary meanings apply. The duration or term of the agreement is only as long as the notice period for termination Example: signing a one year contract where you can be terminated with two weeks notice, only gives you two weeks of security. Negotiate as long a notice of termination as possible for job security, but realize that it may limit you making a swift exit if things really don’t work out.
        Is the contract automatically renewable; and if so, does it include
        language for escalating compensation over time? Are there mutual rights to block both automatic renewal and termination at the end of the agreement term. Does it specify that ending the agreement needs to be done in writing?
        How subjective are the grounds for termination? Can you be terminated
        “/without cause/”?
        What are the defined reasons for termination “/with cause/”? Is there a
        Periodic performance evaluation? What are the performance standards? Any clause that states that you should provide that “highest level of care” is dangerous, not only for your position with the group but also in terms of malpractice. You could be binding yourself to providing a level of care beyond what the law requires or that your malpractice policy will cover you for.
        Is there a “notice and cure” provision which requires both parties to
        identify a problematic breach of the contract and time to fix it, with independent third party review of the efforts to fix the problem.
        Do not agree to indemnify the other party. Most professional liability clauses do not cover “contractually assumed liability.”

        Generally a clause along these lines will have you indemnify the other party to broadly cover any expenses incurred related to your actions or services provided, even if you acted totally appropriately or provided acceptable services. If the other party insists of a clause of this nature you need to specify the amounts of your liability, and obtain a rider on your liability insurance to cover that amount. On the other hand, you want to be indemnified against any liability relating to administrative or on-clinical services you provide (e.g. Hospital committees, etc) –and you should be covered under the other party’s liability policy or have them pay for a rider on yours. Also if you will be in a position to hire and fire (other anesthesiologists, CRNA’s, techs) under direction of the group, then you need to have this direction spelled out and be indemnified against wrongful termination or discrimination suits.
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
        *Page 4*

        Look for a requirement that any amendments need to be signed by both parties. Frequently managed care contracts state that the contract can by changed unilaterally with written notice of the change. If the other party can change the agreement at any time, then any negotiation you do is worthless. Look out for provisions that allow “assignment of rights” or transfer of rights and obligations to another organization/party. These are more common with managed care and hospital contracts, but do show up with anesthesia groups. If an assignment occurs, you could be working for a very different entity. You want advance notice of any action and for the contract to be binding to all assignees. Note the governing law and venue of enforceability – some areas may be in proximity to several states or jurisdictions, which may have different implications (e.g. such as enforceability of non-compete clauses). Dispute resolution with arbitration – an alternative to expensive litigation if there is disagreement. Is it binding? Can you still go on to litigate? What is the appeals process? The contract should spell out who pays for the dispute resolution costs.

        The Employment Contract
        Should specifically spell out: time commitment; call responsibilities, termination and restrictions after you leave, regulations on outside employment (moonlighting, funded lectures that you may give, expert witness participation, etc);
        Post termination restrictions – look out for “tying” or “clean sweep” provisions; ie. That upon termination of the agreement, there is also termination of all staff appointment or privileges at the hospital.
        Non-compete clause or restrictive covenants – there is variable enforceability by state with respect to time and geography. Does it specify ambulatory surgical centers or office based anesthesia? What about employment in administrative or non-clinical positions?
        Does the contract spell out precise details on your responsibilities and time? Amount of time spent at various clinical locations (eg., you may want to join with the expectation of doing a variety of cases and then find yourself getting stuck with OB or surgicenter all the time) How is part time defined with respect to weekends and holidays? Does it specify the scheduling and call priority?
        Does it specify a geographic limitation for taking home call?
        Compensation – Equal or production based? Fee for service or “eat what you kill”?
        What is the exact formula for calculating compensation? How is productivity measured? Does it include non-clinical time? Is the risk of payor mix included?
        Do you get the actual income from each case you do, or is it all pooled and divided between all? Will a particular formula lead to competition for certain cases due to better reimbursement; or conversely, dumping of complex cases since they all pay the same? As the new person will you get the “leftover” low reimbursement cases? Is there a bonus? If so, what is it based on? Is there a requirement to share other income, eg. honoraria.
        How is partner/shareholder compensation calculated? If it is based on a group’s net income, how is “net” defined?
        Fringe benefits should be explained. Know the extent of employee
        contributions (pre vs.post tax)
        The compensation payment must be specific. For example, /not/ “employee
        will be paid $150,000 per year” but rather “employee will be paid $150,000 per year in equal semimonthly installments on the 15th and 30th of each month effective immediately upon the beginning of the employment term”

        -----------------------------------------------------------------------
        *Page 5*

        Does the contract specify the opportunity for advancement/partnership/etc? What about details for voting rights, compensation increases, and the buy-in? Note: if the group has a contract with a hospital that can be ended with short notice, then the buy-in should reflect that precarious position. In other words you don’t want to spend a lot to buy into a group and then have the group lose its contract. Even if specified, realize that the promise to advance you is as short as the notice period for termination. You need to look at the historical practices of the group Credentialing - Any additional or special requirements? Group contract with hospital
        Ask for a copy.
        How long does it last? When does it expire? When is it renewable? When is it cancelable? Is it terminable without cause? Does it restrict the group (and you) from providing service elsewhere? Are there competing anesthesia groups in the same hospital system?

        *Insurance *
        Malpractice
        1. Occurrence – coverage for the services you provide during the time the policy is in effect, no matter when the claim is made.
        2. Claims made - coverage for the services you provide only as long as you have the insurance policy. So when the policy ends (eg. when you leave a group) you have no coverage for any claims relating to clinical services that were provided while you were under that policy. To cover yourself you need a nose or tail policy. With a claims made policy you need to consider the total cost, which would be the cost of the policy /plus/ the cost of any tail coverage you would have to purchase later (tail may cost additional $10-30K).
        Varieties of claims made policies:
        A. Pure – as above
        B. Nose/Tail
        Tail provides retroactive coverage for claims relating to things that happened while you were under your past policy. Nose coverage is from you new insurer. Does the group pick up the tail or nose coverage if you leave?
        C. Modified – reporting a suspected adverse incident triggers lifetime protection on claims arising from that incident. How is the cost calculated? Is there a low intro rate with escalation later? You are a low risk as a new physician and your residency covers all things that
        happened there, so this may not be a good choice. What will the “mature” rate be? How is the tail rate calculated? As a percent of the expiring year’s rate (better) vs a percent of the mature rate? If you change coverage three years out, you don’t want to buy a tail whose cost is based on a mature rate. Is there a free retirement tail? At what age? Is there portability of coverage? Who is the agent selling you this insurance and how are they compensated? Independent (more objective) vs captive. What are the policy limits?
        -----------------------------------------------------------------------
        *Page 6*

        Is there coverage from getting sued for other professional activities and work you do? Moonlighting, professional association, volunteer work, committee work (a D&O policy - directors and officers) Administrative or quasi-clinical – for example if you make decisions on QA, peer-review, or any employment decisions for OR/Pacu personnel
        What are the exclusions to the policy?
        Does you employment contract or the contract between the anesthesia group and the hospital have “contractually assumed liability” which indemnifies the hospital from all blame? Usual clauses state that the group has to pay all costs associated with claims relating to anesthesia and pain services provided, and hold the hospital harmless. Basic professional liability or malpractice policies are unlikely to cover this gap. How eager is the carrier to settle fast rather than litigate? This is important in cases where you may not have done anything wrong, but the carrier sees it cheaper to settle that go thru the legal process – in the end you still lose since your premiums can go up or your record can be tarnished with a “malpractice settlement.” Even worse in the current insurance climate, you could easily become uninsurable as a high risk.
        Disability
        “Own occupation” is a must
        What exclusions?
        How is disability defined?
        When are benefits payable? How long are benefits payable? Short term vs long term vs mixed?
        How are premiums payable – pre or post tax? If the payments are post tax then the benefits are not taxable.
        Should cover “residual” or “partial disability” - if you can still be
        an anesthesiologist but can’t work the same hours or do all the same procedures.
        Should be an “inflation rider” - benefits increase with inflation, preferably tied to CPI (consumer price index)
        Should have “guaranteed renewability” and be “non-cancelable”
        Should have “future insurability” – allows you to buy more coverage without a physical exam?
        Does it have “return of premium” – where you pay more each month but the company invests it and pays it back after a certain number of years - don’t necessarily need this.

        General Liability
        Covers ownership and operation of physical facilities, eg. pain clinic,
        Ambulatory surgicenter
        E&O - Errors and omissions insurance
        Growing insurance field that covers mistakes and oversights for billing errors, erroneous Medicare claims, and possibly for private payor audits.

        Health insurance
        Pre or post tax? How restrictive is it? Can you see the physicians you want to go to? Family coverage? Cumbersome reimbursement process?
        Heidi, PA-S1 - wife to an orthopaedic surgeon, mom to Ryan, 17, and Alexia, 11.


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