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Physician Incomes in Rural and Urban AmericaIssue Brief No. 92 Amid concerns that too few physicians practice in many rural areas, lower income potential is cited as one obstacle to attracting and retaining rural physicians. Congress has responded by increasing Medicare payment rates to virtually all physicians practicing in rural areas. However, average physician incomes in rural and urban areas do not differ significantly, even after accounting for differences in physician work effort, specialty, and other physician and practice characteristics, according to a new national study by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). Moreover, after accounting for the local cost of living, rural physician incomes on average provide about 13 percent more purchasing power than urban physician incomes.
Too Few Rural Physicians or Too Many Urban Physicians?ural areas have fewer physicians per capitaparticularly specialiststhan urban areas, prompting persistent concerns about inadequate access to medical care in many rural areas. To illustrate, on average, rural residents have 53 primary care physicians (PCPs)internists, family/general practitioners and pediatriciansper 100,000 people compared with 78 PCPs per 100,000 urban residents. For specialists, the supply is 54 vs. 134 per 100,000 people, respectively.1 This disparity in physician supply, however, does not necessarily mean that rural areas overall lack enough physicians. Instead, it may reflect an oversupply of physicians in urban areas or the use of urban physiciansparticularly specialistsby rural residents. Other research suggests that across the full population, access to care in rural areas is on par with and, perhaps, slightly better than in urban areas except for access to mental health services.2 For instance, 6 percent of rural patients reported unmet health needs during the prior year, compared with 7 percent of urban patients. To the extent rural residents receive less medical care relative to urban residents, it likely stems from demand-side reasonslower patient income and lower rates of insurance coveragerather than lower physician supply. Although research has shown only small differences in urban and rural physician incomes, advocates often cite lower physician incomes in rural areas as an obstacle to recruiting and retaining physicians. Other obstacles include less control over work hours, professional isolation, fewer spousal job opportunities and a lack of amenities associated with urban areas.3 Back to TopRecent Medicare Law Benefits Almost All Rural PhysiciansThe Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) included two provisions to boost Medicare payment rates to physicians practicing in rural areas. The first enhanced the Medicare Incentive Program between 2005 and 2007, which provides bonus payments for physicians practicing in designated, mostly rural, physician-scarcity areas. The other legislative change established a floor for the geographic adjustment to the work component of the Medicare physician fee schedule between 2004 and 2006, which effectively increased payments to nearly all rural physicians. Although temporary, the estimated cost of both provisions is $1.7 billion. The MMA changes were in addition to existing programs encouraging physicians to practice in underserved areas, many of which are rural.4 The main question for federal policy makers is whether rural physician incomes are sufficiently high to attract and retain enough physicians to provide the population with adequate access to medical careespecially in the case of Medicare. Yet, simple comparisons of average incomes among urban and rural physicians can be misleading because specialty composition, work effort and local price levels differ across urban and rural areas. Back to TopPhysician IncomesAs part of the 2000-01 HSC Community Tracking Study Physician Survey, physicians were asked to report net income from their medical practice during 1999 (see Data Source). Reported physician incomes were inflated to 2003 levels, using a compensation growth rate for all physicians derived from the Medical Group Management Association Physician Compensation and Production Survey.5 Because concerns about access to care are often focused on more remote rural areas, rural physicians were divided into two groups: those practicing in rural counties adjacent to metropolitan areas and those practicing in rural counties nonadjacent to metropolitan areas.6 Average annual physician incomes are somewhat lower in rural areas than in urban areas$204,000 vs. $218,000although the difference is not statistically significant (see Figure 1). Moreover, average physician incomes differed little between rural counties adjacent and nonadjacent to metropolitan areas$201,000 vs. $212,000. Likewise, median physician incomes, though lower, varied little across geographic areas, ranging from $179,000 in rural areas to $184,000 in urban areas.7 A different picture emerges when one looks at physicians real compensation, or the purchasing power of their incomes after accounting for differences in the cost of living, which varies considerably across the nation and generally is lower in rural areas. To create a measure of real compensation, physician incomes were adjusted by a local cost-of-living index.8 Because the cost of living is lower in rural areas, rural physicians have significantly more purchasing poweror higher real incomesafter accounting for the lower cost of living. The average income of rural physicians adjusted for the cost of living was significantly higher than urban physicians$225,000 vs. $199,000. This translates into rural physician incomes providing about 13 percent more purchasing power than urban physician incomes. The average income of physicians in nonadjacent rural counties was highest$242,000while those in rural counties adjacent to metropolitan areas averaged $217,000, although the difference between adjacent/nonadjacent counties was not statistically significant.
Back to TopIncome Differs by SpecialtyNationally, physician income differs by specialty, with specialists earning more than primary care physicians. Proportionally, more rural physicians are primary care providers, comprising 54 percent of the rural physician workforce compared with 38 percent in urban areas. If the specialty distribution in rural areas mirrored that of urban areas, average rural physician incomes without and with adjustment for the cost of living would rise to $212,000 and $232,000, respectively. Before adjusting for the cost of living, rural primary care physicians have an income advantage over their urban counterparts, while rural specialist incomes are lower (see Table 1). Though differences are not statistically significant, rural PCPs earnings are 6 percent greater than urban PCPs while rural specialist incomes are about 3 percent lower. After cost-of-living adjustments, differences were significant with rural PCP real incomes averaging about 30 percent more than urban PCPs ($189,000 vs. $145,000), while rural specialists hold a 15 percent real income advantage ($266,000 vs. $232,000). In rural counties nonadjacent to metropolitan areas, average real incomes were 40 percent and 28 percent greater than urban areas for PCPs and specialists, respectively. Back to Top
Other Factors Affect IncomesSimple comparisons of average physician income may not provide an accurate picture of whether rural physicians are compensated better or worse than their urban counterparts. First, rural physicians typically work somewhat longer hourson average, about 4 percent, or two hours, more a weekthan urban physicians.9 Indeed, among rural primary care physicians the difference is greatest, they work about 10 percent, or five hours, more a week than urban primary care physicians. Second, specialty mix affects urban-rural physician income comparisons. Other differences in urban-rural physician populations, such as average years in practice, also could affect comparisons.10 Finally, rural patients are far more likely to be covered by Medicaid or Medicare, public programs that typically pay less than private insurers. Rural physician practices receive 56 percent of their revenue from Medicare and Medicaid compared with 45 percent for urban practices. The higher proportion of Medicare patients in rural areas is often used to justify higher Medicare payment rates for rural physicians. None of these factors, however, affects rural physician incomes to a great degree (see Figure 2). Adjusting for physician time spent working lowers rural physician incomes relative to urban incomes by 2 to 3 percentage points, while further adjusting physician characteristics such as specialty and years in practice increases rural incomes relative to urban incomes by roughly 4 percentage points. Finally, adjusting for source of practice revenue has virtually no effect and may reflect the fact that many rural physicians are able to command higher payment rates from private insurers because they have little competition in their local markets.11 Back to Top
Back to TopPolicy ImplicationsSimple comparisons of average physician incomes in rural and urban areas indicate that rural physicians generate roughly equivalent incomes from their medical practices as urban physicians. However, rural physicians incomes provide significantly greater purchasing power when adjusted for differences in the cost of living in rural and urban areaseven after controlling for differences in physician and practice characteristics, work effort and sources of practice revenue. Higher real earnings for rural physicians may be a natural market response to compensate physicians for the disadvantages of rural practice. This may explain why rural physicians in more remote counties command higher average incomes than rural physicians practicing closer to metropolitan areas, even before accounting for cost-of-living differences. More central to the question of whether rural physician incomes are too high or not high enough is whether compensation levels are sufficient to generate a supply of physicians necessary to provide rural populations with good access to medical care. The large difference in the number of physicians between urban and rural areas does not imply that rural areas have too few providers. Other research suggests, with the exception of mental health care, that rural areas overall have an adequate number of physicians to provide access to care roughly equivalent and perhaps superior to urban areas.13 Instead, targeted interventions aimed at specific rural areas with documented physician shortages, such as the other, less expensive MMA provision bolstering the Medicare Incentive Program, may be a more efficient way to deal with localized access problems. Back to TopNotes
Back to TopData SourceThis Issue Brief presents findings from the 2000-01 HSC Community Tracking Study Physician Survey, a nationally representative telephone survey of physicians involved in direct patient care in the continental United States. The sample of physicians was drawn from the American Medical Association and the American Osteopathic Association master files and included active, nonfederal, office- and hospital-based physicians who spent at least 20 hours a week in direct patient care. Residents and fellows were excluded. The survey contains information on about 12,000 physicians and the response rate was 59 percent. The sample includes 11,277 physicians practicing in urban areas, 790 in rural counties adjacent to metropolitan areas and 339 in nonadjacent rural counties. Back to TopISSUE BRIEFS are published by the
Center for Studying Health System Change. Vice President: Len M. Nichols |
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