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Texas
Related: About this forumTexas doctors say their revenue has dropped by at least 50% since the pandemic, survey data shows
by Raga Justin, Texas TribuneAs both a health care worker and a small-business owner, the coronavirus pandemic hit Austin pediatrician Ari Brown especially hard.
The public perception of health care right now is: You guys are inundated, and its like being in Greys Anatomy, Brown said. While that was true for hospital and emergency room doctors, she said, for independent medical practices, there was this abrupt halt in business as usual. Even with a swift rollout of telemedicine, her patient volume dropped by at least 50% for two months.
To cope with the resulting cash crunch, Brown reduced her employees hours, began calling patients to remind them of mandatory vaccinations and met families in the parking lot for check-ups. She hasnt taken a paycheck since March 15.
An unlikely casualty of the coronavirus pandemic, independent medical practices are experiencing severe financial strain, according to a Texas Medical Association survey of physicians released Wednesday. The survey analyzed responses from 1,548 Texas physicians and found that 68% of practicing physicians have had to cut work hours, while 62% have had their salaries reduced.
Read more: https://www.texastribune.org/2020/05/20/coronavirus-texas-doctors-revenue-drop/
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Texas doctors say their revenue has dropped by at least 50% since the pandemic, survey data shows (Original Post)
TexasTowelie
May 2020
OP
bamagal62
(4,406 posts)1. I have mixed feelings about how to respond to this one.
SWBTATTReg
(26,146 posts)2. Sad thing about this whole thing is that people still are sick from other illnesses, heart disease,
and still need to deal w/ these issues. One of the next wave of CV-related deaths will not be from the CV itself, but from other untreated illnesses (or neglected illnesses).
