Our Latest Winners

Congratulations, houston43!

Who Just Won A $ 100 Healthcare Package - at any doctor for $0.55

That's 99.45% Off the Retail Price

Bid Packages

  • Small - 50 Bids $25.00
  • Medium - 100 Bids $50.00
  • Large - 220 Bids $100.00
  • Extra Large - 480 Bids $200.00
  • Super Size - 780 Bids $300.00

Doctors going broke


NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Doctors in America are harboring an embarrassing secret: Many of them are going broke.


Half of all doctors in the nation operate a private practice. So if a cash crunch forces the death of an independent practice, it robs a community of a vital health care resource.


Loans to make payroll: Dr. William Pentz, 47, a cardiologist with a Philadelphia private practice, and his partners had to tap into their personal assets to make payroll for employees last year. "And we still barely made payroll last paycheck," he said. "Many of us are also skimping on our own pay.


Pentz said recent steep 35% to 40% cuts in Medicare reimbursements for key cardiovascular services, such as stress tests and echocardiograms, have taken a substantial toll on revenue. "Our total revenue was down about 9% last year compared to 2010," he said.


"These cuts have destabilized private cardiology practices," he said. "A third of our patients are on Medicare. So these Medicare cuts are by far the biggest factor. Private insurers follow Medicare rates. So those reimbursements are going down as well."


Pentz is thinking about an out. "If this continues, I might seriously consider leaving medicine," he said. "I can't keep working this way."


Also on his mind, the impending 27.4% Medicare pay cut for doctors. "If that goes through, it will put us under," he said.


Beau Donegan, senior executive with a hospital cancer center in Newport Beach, Calif., is well aware of physicians' financial woes.


"Many are too proud to admit that they are on the verge of bankruptcy," she said. "These physicians see no way out of the downward spiral of reimbursement, escalating costs of treating patients and insurance companies deciding when and how much they will pay them."


Donegan knows an oncologist "with a stellar reputation in the community" who hasn't taken a salary from his private practice in over a year. He owes drug companies $1.6 million, which he wasn't reimbursed for.


Dr. Neil Barth is that oncologist. He has been in the top 10% of oncologists in his region, according to U.S. News Top Doctors' ranking. Still, he is contemplating personal bankruptcy. That move could shutter his 31-year-old clinical practice and force 6,000 cancer patients to look for a new doctor.


Read more at: http://money.cnn.com/2012/01/05/smallbusiness/doctors_broke/index.htm