J. Y. Du, A. S. Rascoe, R. E. Marcus, Department of Orthopedics, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center/Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2018 Oct;476(10):1910-1919. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000000394.
In an era of increasing healthcare costs, the number and value of nonclinical workers, especially hospital management, has come under increased study. Compensation of hospital executives, especially at major nonprofit medical centers, and the "wage gap" with physicians and clinical staff has been highlighted in the national news. To our knowledge, a systematic analysis of this wage gap and its importance has not been investigated.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) How do wage trends compare between physicians and executives at major nonprofit medical centers? (2) What are the national trends in the wages and the number of nonclinical workers in the healthcare industry? (3) What do nonclinical workers contribute to the growth in national cost of healthcare wages? (4) How much do wages contribute to the growth of national healthcare costs? (5) What are the trends in healthcare utilization?
We identified chief executive officer (CEO) compensation and chief financial officer (CFO) compensation at 22 major US nonprofit medical centers, which were selected from the US News & World Report 2016-2017 Hospital Honor Roll list and four health systems with notable orthopaedic departments, using publicly available Internal Revenue Service 990 forms for the years 2005, 2010, and 2015. Trends in executive compensation over time were assessed using Pearson product-moment correlation tests. As institution-specific compensation data is not available, national mean compensation of orthopaedic surgeons, pediatricians, and registered nurses was used as a surrogate. We chose orthopaedic surgeons and pediatricians for analysis because they represent the two ends of the physician-compensation spectrum. US healthcare industry worker numbers and wages from 2005 to 2015 were obtained from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and used to calculate the national cost of healthcare wages. Healthcare utilization trends were assessed using data from the Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research, the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, and the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey. All data were adjusted for inflation based on 2015 Consumer Price Index.
From 2005 to 2015, the mean major nonprofit medical center CEO compensation increased from USD 1.6 ± 0.9 million to USD 3.1 ± 1.7 million, or a 93% increase (R = 0.112; p = 0.009). The wage gap increased from 3:1 to 5:1 with orthopaedic surgeons, from 7:1 to 12:1 with pediatricians, and from 23:1 to 44:1 with registered nurses. We saw a similar wage-gap trend in CFO compensation. From 2005 to 2015, mean healthcare worker wages increased 8%. Management worker wages increased 14%, nonclinical worker wages increased 7%, and physician salaries increased 10%. The number of healthcare workers rose 20%, from 13 million to 15 million. Management workers accounted for 3% of this growth, nonclinical workers accounted for 27%, and physicians accounted for 5% of the growth. From 2005 to 2015, the national cost-burden of healthcare worker wages grew from USD 663 billion to USD 865 billion (a 30% increase). Nonclinical workers accounted for 27% of this growth, management workers accounted for 7%, and physicians accounted for 18%. In 2015, there were 10 nonclinical workers for every one physician. The cost of healthcare worker wages accounted for 27% of the growth in national healthcare expenditures. From 2005 to 2015, the number of inpatient stays decreased from 38 million to 36 million (a 5% decrease), the number of physician office visits increased from 964 million to 991 million (a 3% increase), and the number of emergency department visits increased from 115 million to 137 million (a 19% increase).
There is a fast-rising wage gap between the top executives of major nonprofit centers and physicians that reflects the substantial, and growing, cost of nonclinical worker wages to the US healthcare system. However, there does not appear to be a proportionate increase in healthcare utilization. These findings suggest a growing, substantial burden of nonclinical tasks in healthcare. Methods to reduce nonclinical work in healthcare may result in important cost-savings.
IV, economic and decision analysis.
在医疗成本不断上升的时代,非临床工作人员(尤其是医院管理人员)的数量和价值受到了越来越多的关注。非营利性医疗中心高管的薪酬,尤其是主要的非营利性医学中心高管的薪酬,以及医生和临床工作人员的“工资差距”,已成为全国新闻的焦点。据我们所知,尚未对这种工资差距及其重要性进行系统分析。
问题/目的:(1)主要非营利性医疗中心的医生和高管的薪酬趋势如何比较?(2)全国非营利性医疗保健行业中薪酬和非临床工作人员数量的趋势是什么?(3)非临床工作人员对美国医疗保健行业工资增长的贡献如何?(4)工资对美国医疗保健成本增长的贡献有多大?(5)医疗保健利用率的趋势是什么?
我们确定了美国新闻与世界报道 2016-2017 年医院荣誉榜中 22 家主要美国非营利性医疗中心的首席执行官(CEO)薪酬和首席财务官(CFO)薪酬,以及四个具有显著骨科部门的医疗系统,使用公开的美国国内税务局 990 表格,时间范围为 2005 年、2010 年和 2015 年。使用 Pearson 积矩相关检验评估随时间推移的高管薪酬趋势。由于机构特定的薪酬数据不可用,因此使用骨科医生、儿科医生和注册护士的全国平均薪酬作为替代。我们选择骨科医生和儿科医生进行分析,因为他们代表了医生薪酬范围的两个极端。2005 年至 2015 年,我们从美国劳工统计局获得了美国医疗保健行业工人人数和工资的数据,并用于计算全国医疗保健工资成本。使用医疗保健质量和研究局、国家门诊医疗保健调查和国家医院门诊医疗保健调查的数据评估医疗保健利用率趋势。所有数据均根据 2015 年消费者价格指数进行了通胀调整。
从 2005 年到 2015 年,主要非营利性医疗中心首席执行官的薪酬从 160 万美元增加到 310 万美元,增长了 93%(R = 0.112;p = 0.009)。薪酬差距从骨科医生的 3:1 增加到 5:1,从儿科医生的 7:1 增加到 12:1,从注册护士的 23:1 增加到 44:1。我们在 CFO 薪酬方面也看到了类似的工资差距趋势。从 2005 年到 2015 年,医疗保健工人的平均工资增长了 8%。管理人员的工资增长了 14%,非临床人员的工资增长了 7%,医生的工资增长了 10%。医疗保健工作者的数量增长了 20%,从 1300 万增加到 1500 万。管理人员占这一增长的 3%,非临床人员占 27%,医生占 5%。从 2005 年到 2015 年,美国医疗保健工人工资的总成本从 6630 亿美元增长到 8650 亿美元(增长 30%)。非临床人员占这一增长的 27%,管理人员占 7%,医生占 18%。2015 年,每一名医生对应 10 名非临床人员。医疗保健工人工资成本占美国医疗保健支出增长的 27%。从 2005 年到 2015 年,住院人数从 3800 万减少到 3600 万(减少 5%),医生门诊就诊次数从 9.64 亿增加到 9.91 亿(增加 3%),急诊就诊次数从 1.15 亿增加到 1.37 亿(增加 19%)。
非营利性医疗中心高管与医生之间的工资差距迅速扩大,反映出非临床人员工资对美国医疗保健系统的成本不断增加。然而,医疗保健利用率似乎并没有相应增加。这些发现表明,医疗保健中非临床任务的负担越来越大。减少医疗保健中非临床工作的方法可能会带来重要的成本节约。
IV,经济和决策分析。