Guest guest Posted August 10, 2012 Report Share Posted August 10, 2012 is payroll you only or do you have staff I believe it was this listserv that asked how much the “average” overhead is or patient’s seen to break even. I hadn’t looked at this for a while so decided to look at it. Very rough figuring. But I took total payments for the 1st quarter divided by patients seen; that turned out to be $78.78/patient average payment and I bill mostly 99214’s. Then I just looked at my expenses for the 1st quarter. Keep in mind NJ is high rent, high malpractice state. My total expenses was $28,805 for the quarter. But this doesn’t include malpractice which is paid in July. So if I add 3 months of malpractice, that is an additional $3484 which is $32,289. I see patients in the office 4 days a week. This represents 13 weeks but I took 1 weeks vacation in March so it’s only 12 weeks. That would mean my office costs $2691/week or $672.75 per day to run; or 8.5 patients/day to break even. Rent, payroll, insurance makes up 73% of my costs in that order. Payroll is 22%. And my landlord has nicely frozen my rent for past 3 years instead of the 3% increase/year that was scheduled. Kathy Saradarian, MDNJ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2012 Report Share Posted August 10, 2012 I should do this for medical clients vs. Botox, etc. My problem is a move, and buildout at huge interest, that I can't get refi'd. But I see more medical clients than most on this list serve, avg 15/d, winter up to 22, summer down to 8. But I also do Botox/filler clients 1-10/d, which pay much better. If it wasn't for them, I'd have closed 2 years or more ago. Vanity is alive and well, my Botox from 2010-2011 doubled in income, and number of patients, with no increase in fees or overhead. This year is up 30% from that. Meanwhile, as prev stated, more and more of the medical clients want something for nothing, and can't even be coxed to pay what they have already incurred, many I know near bankruptcy themselves. Last year when I ran the insurance vs patient pay amounts, insurance had fallen by about 30% of what they pay, and patients had increased that or more. Will run the numbers and get back to the list. Cote To: Sent: Friday, August 10, 2012 9:02:43 AMSubject: Overhead I believe it was this listserv that asked how much the “average†overhead is or patient’s seen to break even. I hadn’t looked at this for a while so decided to look at it. Very rough figuring. But I took total payments for the 1st quarter divided by patients seen; that turned out to be $78.78/patient average payment and I bill mostly 99214’s. Then I just looked at my expenses for the 1st quarter. Keep in mind NJ is high rent, high malpractice state. My total expenses was $28,805 for the quarter. But this doesn’t include malpractice which is paid in July. So if I add 3 months of malpractice, that is an additional $3484 which is $32,289. I see patients in the office 4 days a week. This represents 13 weeks but I took 1 weeks vacation in March so it’s only 12 weeks. That would mean my office costs $2691/week or $672.75 per day to run; or 8.5 patients/day to break even. Rent, payroll, insurance makes up 73% of my costs in that order. Payroll is 22%. And my landlord has nicely frozen my rent for past 3 years instead of the 3% increase/year that was scheduled. Kathy Saradarian, MD NJ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 10, 2012 Report Share Posted August 10, 2012 I do my own payroll but have an accountant that does the reports and double checks what Quickbooks does. One of the people on payroll is my biller and I bill inhouse. I could factor her out as “billing costs” But she also helps on the phone and messages. Oh, my first message accidentally deleted where I explained staffing. I have a part-time biller and 2 part-time receptionists who sometimes overlap hours by about 1 hour. No clinical staff. This does not include my take-home as I only take home if I exceed the 8.5 patients per day. Kathy Saradaria, MD From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of GordonSent: Friday, August 10, 2012 12:08 PMTo: Subject: Re: Overhead is payroll you only or do you have staff I believe it was this listserv that asked how much the “average” overhead is or patient’s seen to break even. I hadn’t looked at this for a while so decided to look at it. Very rough figuring. But I took total payments for the 1st quarter divided by patients seen; that turned out to be $78.78/patient average payment and I bill mostly 99214’s. Then I just looked at my expenses for the 1st quarter. Keep in mind NJ is high rent, high malpractice state. My total expenses was $28,805 for the quarter. But this doesn’t include malpractice which is paid in July. So if I add 3 months of malpractice, that is an additional $3484 which is $32,289. I see patients in the office 4 days a week. This represents 13 weeks but I took 1 weeks vacation in March so it’s only 12 weeks. That would mean my office costs $2691/week or $672.75 per day to run; or 8.5 patients/day to break even. Rent, payroll, insurance makes up 73% of my costs in that order. Payroll is 22%. And my landlord has nicely frozen my rent for past 3 years instead of the 3% increase/year that was scheduled. Kathy Saradarian, MDNJ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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