Louisville Medicine Volume 63, Issue 10 | Page 29

FROM THE BLOGOSPHERE YES CASSIE, THERE IS A FUTURE IN PRIMARY CARE Kathy Nieder, MD M y daughter recently introduced me to a friend of hers via email. She is a newly minted fourth-year medical student, named Cassie, who asked me: “I would love to hear your thoughts about the future of primary care and what it is like to work as a family medicine doctor in Louisville.” To start, I’d encourage you to read the recently published New York Times review of the state of primary care. If you began in practice today, you would quickly find yourself with more patients than you can adequately care for, having just left residency and not expecting to see 25-30 patients daily. In Louisville, you will probably be employed by one of three healthcare systems. All of them have compensation based on patient volume and RVUs--I hope someone has showed you what RVUs are but I bet they haven’t. Relative Value Units are supposed to measure the “time, skill, training and intensity”[1] of patient care and compensate accordingly. Unfortunately they are heavily skewed toward proceduralists. As Dr. John Mandrola, a Louisville interventional cardiologist, observes in his excellent post “Thirty Dollars...Really?” a doctor is paid a lot more to do a coronary catheterization than to talk about the causes behind coronary artery disease. To understand H]H[ܙH