2014 SURVEY. Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates



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SURVEY Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates A survey examining the time needed to schedule a new patient appointment with a physician in major metropolitan markets and the rates of physician Medicaid and Medicare acceptance in these markets. Based on 13 data. Merritt Hawkins 1 Statesman Drive Irving, Texas 763 ( ) 876- merritthawkins.com

Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates SURVEY A survey examining the time needed to schedule a new patient appointment with a physician in major metropolitan markets and the rates of physician Medicaid and Medicare acceptance in these markets. Summary Report Key Findings 2 5 Merritt Hawkins Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates Trends and Observations Conclusion 7 28 For additional information about this survey contact: Phillip Miller () 876- phil.miller@amnhealthcare.com 1 Statesman Drive Irving, TX 763 merritthawkins.com

Summary Report Survey Of Physician Appointment Wait Times And Medicaid And Medicare Acceptance Rates OVERVIEW Merritt Hawkins is a national healthcare search and consulting firm specializing in the recruitment of physicians in all medical specialties as well as advanced practice clinical professionals. Established in 1987, Merritt Hawkins is a company of AMN Healthcare (NYSE: AHS) the innovator in healthcare workforce solutions and the largest provider of healthcare staffing services in the nation. Merritt Hawkins conducts an ongoing series of surveys on a wide range of physician workforce topics, including physician recruiting incentives, physician practice patterns, hospital recruiting patterns, physician revenue generation and related subjects. This report summarizes the results of Merritt Hawkins Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates. The survey was conducted to determine the average time new patients must wait before they can see a physician in a variety of large metropolitan markets. The survey also examines the percentage of physicians willing or able to schedule Medicaid and Medicare patients in these markets. The survey is intended to gauge patient access to medical services and may be taken by healthcare professionals, policy makers, and academics as one indicator of the current state of physician supply and demand in select markets and in select medical specialties. This is third time Merritt Hawkins has conducted a physician appointment wait time survey. The first Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times was conducted in 4 and the second in 9. These surveys included data on Medicaid rates of acceptance among physicians but not Medicare rates of acceptance. Comparisons to 4 and 9 results are included in this report where relevant. Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates 2

METHODOLOGY From June 1, 13 through November 5, 13, research associates at Merritt Hawkins called physician offices in metropolitan areas with the purpose of scheduling a new patient appointment. The survey focused on five medical specialties: cardiology, dermatology, obstetrics-gynecology, orthopedic surgery and family practice. Names of physicians were selected at random from Internetbased physician office listings such as the online Yellow Pages. CARDIOLOGY A heart check-up DERMATOLOGY A routine skin exam to detect possible carcinomas/melanomas ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY Injury or pain in the knee OBSTETRICS/GYNECOLOGY A routine well-woman gynecological exam FAMILY PRACTICE A routine physical Merritt Hawkins research associates were tasked with contacting a minimum of 1 different physician practices/medical groups (rather than multiple physicians in one practice/medical group) per specialty per metropolitan area, if possible, and a maximum of different offices, with being the preferred goal. In each call, research associates asked to be told the first available time for a new patient appointment with a physician. Depending on the specialty at issue, they indicated a non-emergent reason for the appointment, as follows: 3 Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates

Research associates also asked if the physician in question accepted Medicaid or Medicare as a form of payment. Merritt Hawkins goal was to replicate the experience of someone new to a community, new to an insurance plan, or otherwise in need of a new patient, non-emergent physician appointment seeking to schedule such an appointment through a generally accessible source, including the Internet, the Yellow Pages or a PPO physician directory. Phone research was conducted during an approximate five-month period. The results therefore are a snapshot of physician accessibility at a particular time and in a particular place. A change in timing or approach could yield different results. Merritt Hawkins conducted similar surveys in 4 and 9, and comparisons are made in this survey to results of these prior surveys. It should be noted, however, that no attempt was made to contact the same practices that were contacted in 4 and 9. In addition, in 9, family practice was added to the variety of specialties included in the survey, and therefore no comparison can be made in this specialty to results tabulated in 4. As referenced above, rates of physician Medicaid acceptance were included in the 4 and 9 surveys. marks the first time that rates of Medicare acceptance were included in the survey. Metropolitan service areas in which surveys were conducted: Surveys were conducted in metropolitan areas located in geographically diverse regions of the country, including Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis, New York, Philadelphia, Portland, San Diego, Seattle, Washington, D.C. When survey was conducted: June 1, 13 November 5, 13 Medical specialties surveyed: Cardiology, Dermatology, Obstetrics-Gynecology, Orthopedic Surgery, Family Practice Number of distinct medical offices surveyed: 1,399 Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates 4

Key Findings Following are some of the key findings resulting from Merritt Hawkins Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Rates of Acceptance AVERAGE WAIT TIME 45.4 D AYS At 45.4 days, Boston has the highest cumulative average wait time for a physician appointment of the metropolitan markets surveyed. Boston also had the highest average waits times when the survey was conducted in 9 and 4. The average appointment wait time to see a family physician ranged from a high of 66 days in Boston to a low of in Dallas. The average appointment wait time to see an obstetrician/gynecologist ranged from a high of 46 days in Boston to a low of 1 days in Seattle. The average appointment wait time to see a dermatologist ranged from a high of 7 in Boston to a low of in Miami. The average appointment wait time to see a cardiologist ranged from a high of 32 days in Washington, D.C. to a low of 11 days in Atlanta. The average appointment wait time to see an orthopedic surgeon ranged from a high of 1 in San Diego to a low of in Philadelphia, Minneapolis and Houston. The average cumulative wait times to see a cardiologist in all markets was 16., up from. in 9 but down from. in 4. The average cumulative wait time to see a dermatologist in all markets was 28.8 days, up from 22.s in 9 and 24.3 days in 4. The average cumulative wait time to see an obstetrician/gynecologist in all markets was., down from 27. in 9 and 23. in 4. The average cumulative wait time to see an orthopedic surgeon in all markets was 9., down from 16. in 9 and 16. in 4. AVERAGE WAIT TIME 1.2 DAYS At 1., Dallas has the lowest cumulative average wait time for a physician appointment of the markets surveyed. 5 Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates

The average cumulative wait time to see a family physician in all markets was 19., approximately the same as. in 9 (family practice was not included in the survey in 4). The average cumulative wait time to see a physician for all five specialties surveyed in in all markets was., down from.4 days in 9 and. in 4..5 DAYS WAIT TIME Boston has the highest rate of Medicaid acceptance by physicians in the markets surveyed (73%), while Dallas has the lowest (23%). Of the markets surveyed, Boston has the highest rate of Medicare acceptance by physicians in all five specialties (98%) while Minneapolis has the lowest (38.2%). The cumulative average rate of Medicare acceptance in all 5 specialties and in all markets surveyed was 76% (rates of Medicare acceptance were not included in the 9 and 4 surveys). The longest reported wait time to see a physician was 256 days for a dermatology appointment in Minneapolis. The shortest reported wait time to see a physician was in multiple specialties and multiple markets. MEDICARE ACCEPTANCE 76.% The cumulative average rate of Medicaid acceptance by physicians in all 5 specialties and in all markets surveyed was 45.7%, down from.4% in 9 and 49.9% in 4. MEDICAID ACCEPTANCE 45.7% Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates 6

Following is a listing of appointment wait times, Medicaid and Medicare acceptance by specialty and by market. CARDIOLOGY - Ranked by Longest Average Wait Time to Shortest Average Wait Time City Total Offices Shortest Time to Appt Longest Time to Appt Average Time to Appt Accepts Medicaid? Yes (%) Accepts Medicare? Yes (%) Wash., D.C., 13 Wash., D.C., 9 Wash., D.C., 4 16 1 16 4 days 4 days Same day 6 days 37 days 2 3 1 63 94 San Diego, 13 San Diego, 9 San Diego, 4 19 13 7 28 day 2 68 Denver, 13 Denver, 9 Denver, 4 1 7 47 days 12 2 2 86 Boston, 13 Boston, 9 Boston, 4 7 days 13 64 days s 27 days 2s 37 days 11 Miami, 13 Miami, 9 Miami, 4 4 days 4 days 7 days days 4 1 2 2s 71 64 4 82 Detroit, 13 Detroit, 9 Detroit, 4 4 days 7 days 5 days 4 days 83 65 New York, 13 New York, 9 New York, 4 11 2 3 26 days days days 2 7 75 Minneapolis, 13 Minneapolis, 9 Minneapolis, 4 6 days 27 days 1 1 days 47 days days 7 36 Los Angeles, 13 Los Angeles, 9 Los Angeles, 4 16 13 2 3 days 2 1s days 44 22 Portland, 13 Portland, 9 Portland, 4 16 11 days days 12 1s 2 88 94 Dallas, 13 Dallas, 9 Dallas, 4 12 84 days days 1s 3 8 Atlanta, 13 Atlanta, 9 Atlanta, 4 7 2 1s 9 95 Houston, 13 Houston, 9 Houston, 4 19 26 days 2 4 1s 1s 65 84 75 Seattle, 13 Seattle, 9 Seattle, 4 2s 2s 24 days 7 86 Philadelphia, 13 Philadelphia, 9 Philadelphia, 4 12 2s 2s 136 days 6 days 1s 27 days 47 8 87 Total, 13 Total, 9 Total, 4 262 216 278 2.4 days 2.4 days 3. days 65.7 days 48.6 days 65. 16... 63 82 86 7 Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates

DERMATOLOGY - Ranked by Longest Average Wait Time to Shortest Average Wait Time City Boston, 13 Boston, 9 Boston, 4 Total Offices Shortest Time to Appt 7 days Longest Time to Appt s 36 s Average Time to Appt 7 54 days days Accepts Medicaid? Yes (%) 67 Accepts Medicare? Yes (%) Minneapolis, 13 Minneapolis, 9 Minneapolis, 4 19 26 4 23s 56 days 4 87 3 Philadelphia, 13 Philadelphia, 9 Philadelphia, 4 7 days 6 days 1 36 days 4 47 days 3 6 Denver, 13 Denver, 9 Denver, 4 7 days Same day 1 days 97 days 6 days 37 days 4 days 2s 3 29 Seattle, 13 Seattle, 9 Seattle, 4 1 12 4s 1 3 1s 27 days 35 6 27 75 Portland, 13 Portland, 9 Portland, 4 11 19 57 days days 27 days 2 3 days 45 28 New York, 13 New York, 9 New York, 4 4 days Same day 7 days 4 24 days 1s 3 12 Detroit, 13 Detroit, 9 Detroit, 4 16 1 3s 6 2 1s 2 45 67 25 Houston, 13 Houston, 9 Houston, 4 4 days s days 9s 2s 3s 1 4 Dallas, 13 Dallas, 9 Dallas, 4 46 days 6 7 days 1 34 days Wash., D.C., 13 Wash., D.C., 9 Wash., D.C., 4 13 Same day 3 34 days 3 days 28 87 Miami, 13 Miami, 9 Miami, 4 12 57 days 5 45 7 71 San Diego, 13 San Diego, 9 San Diego, 4 21 1 5s 4 days 1 33 65 Atlanta, 13 Atlanta, 9 Atlanta, 4 21 8 7s 6 days days Los Angeles, 13 Los Angeles, 9 Los Angeles, 4 12 16 Same day 3s 56 days 36 days days 1 days 7 58 79 Total, 13 Total, 9 Total, 4 294 233 269 3.s 3.4 days 3. 123. 14.4 days. 28. 22.s 24. 27 44 43 78 Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates 8

OBSTETRICS-GYNECOLOGY - Ranked by Longest Average Wait Time to Shortest Average Wait Time City Boston, 13 Boston, 9 Boston, 4 Total Offices 1 16 Shortest Time to Appt days Longest Time to Appt 1 days 126 days Average Time to Appt 46 days 7 days 4 Accepts Medicaid? Yes (%) 9 77 56 Accepts Medicare? Yes (%) Portland, 13 Portland, 9 Portland, 4 136 days 5 7 3 1 3 days 75 42 9 Philadelphia, 13 Philadelphia, 9 Philadelphia, 4 16 4 days 9 16s 7 2 46 days 2 63 27 24 81 Denver, 13 Denver, 9 Denver, 4 56 days 3 2 days 2 35 33 25 Detroit, 13 Detroit, 9 Detroit, 4 4 days 84 days days days 3 7 4 95 Atlanta, 13 Atlanta, 9 Atlanta, 4 16 56 days 4s 57 days days 24 days 62 25 6 Wash., D.C., 13 Wash., D.C., 9 Wash., D.C., 4 8 6 days 3 6 2 days 3 1s 35 38 San Diego, 13 San Diego, 9 San Diego, 4 6 days 4s days 96 days days 3 3s 45 Houston, 13 Houston, 9 Houston, 4 3 137 days 6 days 4s days 41 6 72 47 Miami, 13 Miami, 9 Miami, 4 12 4 days 3 6 days 2 4 28 Seattle, 13 Seattle, 9 Seattle, 4 3 days 3 26 days 7 7 New York, 13 New York, 9 New York, 4 3 5 2 1 days 24 5 24 Minneapolis, 13 Minneapolis, 9 Minneapolis, 4 6 days 2 days 6s days 4 47 4 Dallas, 13 Dallas, 9 Dallas, 4 21 1 6 6 days 3 65 Los Angeles, 13 Los Angeles, 9 Los Angeles, 4 16 26 days 1 5 26 days 1 36 57 69 86 Total, 13 Total, 9 Total, 4 284 228 261 2. 2. 3. days 57.7 days 98.7 days 65.s. 27. 23. 47 41 6 67 9 Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY - Ranked by Longest Average Wait Time to Shortest Average Wait Time City Total Offices Shortest Time to Appt Longest Time to Appt Average Time to Appt Accepts Medicaid? Yes (%) Accepts Medicare? Yes (%) San Diego, 13 San Diego, 9 San Diego, 4 7 days 6 3 36 days 1 1 Detroit, 13 Detroit, 9 Detroit, 4 3 4 days 6 days 46 days 1 4 1 1s 1 72 33 22 94 Boston, 13 Boston, 9 Boston, 4 9 16 4 days 4 7 6 days 4 days 24 days 7 44 88 95 Denver, 13 Denver, 9 Denver, 4 11 6 56 days 36 days days days 2 45 45 4 Wash., D.C., 13 Wash., D.C., 9 Wash., D.C., 4 8 34 days 4 2 1s 44 37 83 Portland, 13 Portland, 9 Portland, 4 19 Same day 2 26 days 1 53 76 Miami, 13 Miami, 9 Miami, 4 7 days 3 days 1 2s 7 days 1s 6 36 75 New York, 13 New York, 9 New York, 4 days 47 days 3 days 4 24 1 Dallas, 13 Dallas, 9 Dallas, 4 2s 36 1 4 25 43 Los Angeles, 13 Los Angeles, 9 Los Angeles, 4 11 3s 4 1 7 days 4 35 45 88 Atlanta, 13 Atlanta, 9 Atlanta, 4 13 s s Same day 3 1 6 days 46 75 Seattle, 13 Seattle, 9 Seattle, 4 1 1 27 days 6 days 28 79 83 Philadelphia, 13 Philadelphia, 9 Philadelphia, 4 8 16 4 days 6 days 76 days 2 1 63 25 72 Minneapolis, 13 Minneapolis, 9 Minneapolis, 4 7 days 1s 4 9 days 1 93 79 33 Houston, 13 Houston, 9 Houston, 4 11 1 3 3 days 78 45 3 94 Total, 13 Total, 9 Total, 4 282 192 254 2.s 2. 2. 31. 59. 43. days 9. 16. 16. 43 44 44 77 Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates 1

FAMILY PRACTICE - Ranked by Longest Average Wait Time to Shortest Average Wait Time City Total Offices Shortest Time to Appt Longest Time to Appt Average Time to Appt Accepts Medicaid? Yes (%) Accepts Medicare? Yes (%) Boston, 13 Boston, 9 6 days 36 66 days 6 65 53 95 New York, 13 New York, 9 19 19 days 6 days 3 6s 26 days 24 days 32 79 42 Atlanta, 13 Atlanta, 9 1 2s 24 days 4 67 Seattle, 13 Seattle, 9 12 days 2 Philadelphia, 13 Philadelphia, 9 9 days 2s 67 72 89 Los Angeles, 13 Los Angeles, 9 19 126 days 36 days 5 53 3 79 Houston, 13 Houston, 9 2 1 7 Denver, 13 Denver, 9 16 6 4 days 94 Detroit, 13 Detroit, 9 74 days 3s days 59 9 Wash., D.C., 13 Wash., D.C., 9 19 6 36 days 3 days 71 63 93 Portland, 13 Portland, 9 19 4 1 6 79 Miami, 13 Miami, 9 16 56 days 2 7 days 56 4 81 Minneapolis, 13 Minneapolis, 9 3 days 2 35 53 San Diego, 13 San Diego, 9 9 7 days 24 days 86 Dallas, 13 Dallas, 9 27 days 3 Total, 13 Total, 9 277 278 2.87 days 2.47 days 79. 99.6 days 19...6 65.4 77.3 11 Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates

AVERAGE WAIT TIMES BY METROPOLITAN AREA City Cardiology Dermatology OB/GYN Orthopedic Surgery Family Practice Atlanta, 13 Atlanta, 9 Atlanta, 4 1s days days 2s days 24 days 6 days 24 days Boston, 13 Boston, 9 Boston, 4 27 days 2s 37 days 7 54 days days 46 days 7 days 4 4 days 24 days 66 days 6 Dallas, 13 Dallas, 9 Dallas, 4 1s 1 34 days 4 Denver, 13 Denver, 9 Denver, 4 2 2 37 days 4 days 2s 2 days 2 days days 2 days Detroit, 13 Detroit, 9 Detroit, 4 7. days 2 2 days 3 1 1s 1 days Houston, 13 Houston, 9 Houston, 4 1s 1s 1s 2s 3s 1 days 4s days days 1 Los Angeles, 13 Los Angeles, 9 Los Angeles, 4 1s days days 1 days 26 days 1 7 days 4 days 5 Miami, 13 Miami, 9 Miami, 4 1 2 2s 1 2 7 days 1s 7 days Minneapolis, 13 Minneapolis, 9 Minneapolis, 4 days 47 days days 56 days 4 days days 1 New York, 13 New York, 9 New York, 4 days days 2 24 days 1s 1 days days 26 days 24 days Philadelphia, 13 Philadelphia, 9 Philadelphia, 4 6 days 1s 27 days 4 47 days 3 2 46 days 2 2 1 2s Portland, 13 Portland, 9 Portland, 4 1s 2 27 days 2 3 days 3 1 3 days 1 1 San Diego, 13 San Diego, 9 San Diego, 4 2 2 days days 3 3s 1 1 7 days 24 days Seattle, 13 Seattle, 9 Seattle, 4 3 1s 27 days 3 26 days 6 days 2 Wash., D.C. 13 Wash., D.C. 9 Wash., D.C. 4 3 1 days days 3 1s 1s days 3 days Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates 12

MEDICAID ACCEPTANCE RATE BY METROPOLITAN AREA City Cardiology (%) Dermatology (%) OB/GYN (%) Orthopedic Surgery (%) Family Practice (%) Atlanta, 13 Atlanta, 9 Atlanta, 4 9 62 25 46 4 67 Boston, 13 Boston, 9 Boston, 4 11 67 9 77 56 7 44 88 65 53 Dallas, 13 Dallas, 9 Dallas, 4 3 8 3 25 43 3 Denver, 13 Denver, 9 Denver, 4 86 3 29 35 33 45 45 4 94 Detroit, 13 Detroit, 9 Detroit, 4 83 65 45 25 25 7 4 72 33 22 59 Houston, 13 Houston, 9 Houston, 4 65 84 4 3 41 6 72 78 45 3 Los Angeles, 13 Los Angeles, 9 Los Angeles, 4 44 22 7 58 36 57 29 35 45 53 3 Miami, 13 Miami, 9 Miami, 4 71 64 4 45 7 71 4 28 6 36 56 4 Minneapolis, 13 Minneapolis, 9 Minneapolis, 4 7 87 4 47 83 93 79 35 New York, 13 New York, 9 New York, 4 7 3 12 24 5 4 24 1 32 79 Philadelphia, 13 Philadelphia, 9 Philadelphia, 4 47 8 6 63 27 24 63 75 67 72 Portland, 13 Portland, 9 Portland, 4 88 45 28 75 53 6 79 San Diego, 13 San Diego, 9 San Diego, 4 68 1 33 45 86 Seattle, 13 Seattle, 9 Seattle, 4 7 86 35 6 27 7 28 79 Wash., D.C. 13 Wash., D.C. 9 Wash., D.C. 4 63 87 35 38 44 37 71 63 13 Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates

MEDICARE ACCEPTANCE RATE BY METROPOLITAN AREA (Question first asked in 13 no data for 9 & 4 available) City Cardiology (%) Dermatology (%) OB/GYN (%) Orthopedic Surgery (%) Family Practice (%) Atlanta, 13 95 6 75 Boston, 13 95 95 Dallas, 13 65 Denver, 13 Detroit, 13 95 94 9 Houston, 13 75 47 94 7 Los Angeles, 13 79 86 88 79 Miami, 13 82 75 81 Minneapolis, 13 36 3 4 33 53 New York, 13 75 24 42 Philadelphia, 13 87 81 72 89 Portland, 13 94 9 76 San Diego, 13 65 Seattle, 13 75 7 83 Wash., D.C. 13 94 83 93 Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates

Trends and Observations OVERVIEW Merritt Hawkins Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance is intended to present a snapshot of physician availability in five select medical specialties in major metropolitan areas nationwide. It should be noted that physician-to-population ratios in these metropolitan areas in most cases are higher than the national average (see chart below). Physician-to-Population Ratios in Metro Markets Versus the National Average If access to physicians in metropolitan areas with a large number of physicians per capita is limited, it may be reasonable to infer that physician access could be more problematic in areas with fewer physicians per capita (with the caveat that large metropolitan areas have wide physician-topopulation variations within them and often have population groups that have been designated by the federal government as medically underserved). In so far as it was possible, Merritt Hawkins attempted to duplicate the experience of a person seeking to make a new patient appointment with a physician in one of five specialties for a non-emergent medical need in one of metropolitan markets. A secondary goal was to determine the number of physician practices in various metropolitan settings willing or able to see Medicaid and Medicare patients. Metropolitan Area Atlanta Boston Dallas/Fort Worth Denver Detroit Houston Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis New York Philadelphia Portland San Diego Seattle Washington, D.C United States Physician per, population 212.5 4.1 197.2 271.9 268.1 235.2 253.9 253.7 264.1 344.6 322.4 297.6 27.2 297.8 3.1 226. The survey was conducted as a continuation of Merritt Hawkins longstanding interest in physician supply and demand issues. In 1992, Merritt Hawkins published its first article regarding physician supply. The article contended that expanding access to healthcare as proposed by the Clinton administration would be difficult due to the widespread dearth of doctors. With the projected expansion of healthcare insurance to millions of previously uninsured people through the Affordable Care Act (ACA), that issue remains particularly relevant today. Source: America Medical Association Physician Master File Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates

Since 1992, Merritt Hawkins executives have authored dozens of articles on physician supply and demand issues and also have written a book on the physician shortage entitled Will the Last Physician in America Please Turn Off the Lights? In tandem with AMN Healthcare, Merritt Hawkins provided funding to the Council on Physician and Nurse Supply, a group of nationally noted healthcare experts that during its tenure was based at the University of Pennsylvania and was dedicated to addressing the national shortage of nurses and physicians. In 8 and 12, Merritt Hawkins conducted two of the largest physician surveys ever completed in the United States on behalf of The Physicians Foundation (www.physiciansfoundation.org). These surveys, one of which was distributed to 3, physicians and the other to over 6, physicians, were intended in part to determine if physicians are taking steps that would limit patient access to their services. With AMN Healthcare, Merritt Hawkins helps organize and sponsor an annual Healthcare Workforce Summit, a gathering of healthcare workforce experts and medical facility administrators dedicated to tracking and analyzing healthcare workforce challenges and solutions. The Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Rates of Acceptance is an attempt to bring the physician supply discussion, which often deals in abstract projections of hypothetical physician need, into practical focus by tracking the time it takes patients to schedule physician appointments. Survey results should be approached with several caveats. It can be difficult to gauge a physician s availability through one phone call made to his or her office regarding the physician s next available appointment time. Appointment times can open up unexpectedly, allowing a patient to schedule an appointment earlier than he or she might ordinarily be able to. Should a physician happen to be on vacation or otherwise away from the office, it could take a patient longer to schedule an appointment than ordinarily would be the case. In addition, demand for medical services can fluctuate in various markets during flu season, vacation season and other times when physician utilization is uncharacteristically high or low, and appointment wait times could be uncharacteristically long or short during these periods. Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates 16

As referenced above, physicians are not evenly distributed across all population groups within large metropolitan areas. Physician appointment wait times therefore may be shorter in those areas of a city where physicians are concentrated and longer in those areas where there are fewer physicians. all specialties, and in the great majority of cases were able to reach practices or more. In some metropolitan areas, physicians in certain specialties have consolidated into large groups and there may be a limited number of groups from which to select. There also are the vagaries of medical practice phone systems to consider. In some cases, Merritt Hawkins researchers could not break through the various automated telephone sequences needed to reach a person able to schedule an appointment. In other cases, researchers encountered answering machines indicating the office was temporarily not taking phone calls. In such cases, researchers moved on to other medical offices. By doing so, researchers attempted to duplicate the experience of a patient new to a community or simply in need of a physician dialing through various medical offices in search of an appointment. Despite these caveats, we believe survey data, which Merritt Hawkins has generated three times over the course of a decade, reflect in general what patients would encounter at a given time when attempting to schedule physician appointments at physician offices in of the largest cities in the United States. The survey therefore provides one indicator of physician availability in five medical specialties in metropolitan areas with a relatively high concentration of physicians. Merritt Hawkins researchers called seeking appointments for non-emergent medical conditions such as exams (though in the case of orthopedic surgery, researchers called seeking appointments for injury or pain to the knee). The survey therefore does not measure physician availability in cases of medical emergency. Merritt Hawkins researchers attempted to reach a minimum of 1 distinct medical offices/medical groups per medical specialty, per metropolitan market, with an optimum target of offices. Researchers were able to contact the minimum of 1 physician offices in all markets and Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates

Physician Appointment Wait Times by Specialty Merritt Hawkins Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance reflects the ability of patients with non-emergent medical needs to access physician services in large metropolitan markets. As non-clinicians, Merritt Hawkins is unable to comment on the clinical effect the appointment wait times indicated in the survey may have on patients reporting non-emergent problems similar to the hypothetical ones stated by its research associates. However, some inferences regarding the general availability of physicians can be made based on the wait times reported for the five specialties included in the survey. In Merritt Hawkins experience, in evaluating physician practices, a physician generally is considered to be busy if his or her practice is booked for new patient appointments two weeks or more in advance. In such cases, the recruitment of a new physician, physician assistant or nurse practitioner may be warranted. days), Boston (27 days) Miami (1), Detroit (), New York ( days) and Minneapolis ( days) By contrast, in 9, average wait times in cardiology equaled or exceeded days in five of the metropolitan markets, and in 4 wait times equaled or exceeded days in 11 of the metropolitan markets surveyed. The cumulative average time to schedule a cardiology appointment in all markets increased in relative to 9, but decreased relative to 4 (see chart below) Average Cardiology Appointment Wait Times, All Markets YEAR 13 9 4 DAYS 16.8.5.8 Twelve of the markets showed increased average wait times for cardiology relative to 9, but only five markets showed increased wait times relative to 4, with two markets showing the same average wait times in as in 4. Following is a review of the five specialties included in the survey examining which markets appear to have extended wait times and which do not. Cardiology In cardiology, average appointment wait times exceeded days in seven of the metropolitan markets: Washington, D.C. (3), San Diego (2), Denver (28 Certain markets, including San Diego, Denver, Boston, Miami, Washington, D.C. and New York have exhibited a pattern over the three years the survey has been conducted of relatively high average wait times in cardiology, equaling or exceeding days in most cases (with two exceptions: Denver in 9 with an average wait time of and Washington, D.C. in 4 with an average wait time of ). Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates

Others, such as Seattle, Houston, Los Angeles, Atlanta, and Dallas, have exhibited a pattern over the years the survey has been conducted of relatively short average wait times in cardiology of days or fewer (with one exception: Atlanta in 4, with an average of ). Several markets, including Philadelphia, Detroit, Portland and Minneapolis, have exhibited a more variable pattern in cardiology. Philadelphia, for example, showed an average wait time for cardiology of six days in 13, 1s in 9 and 27 days in 4; Portland showed average wait times in cardiology of in 13, 1s in 9 and 2 in 4, and Detroit showed average wait times in cardiology of in 13, eight days in 9 and days in 4. Minneapolis showed an average wait time for cardiology of days in 13 and 4 and 47 days in 9. It should be noted that in these markets the average wait times in two of the three survey years are generally consistent, while there is a one year aberration. Given the variation that can exist in physician appointment wait times due to seasonality and other factors referenced above, some year by year inconsistencies are to be expected. However, a general pattern is emerging in which variable markets such as Philadelphia, Detroit, Portland and Minnesota showed average wait times in cardiology of days or less in two out of the three years the survey has been conducted. It is probable, therefore, that these markets exhibit generally moderate wait times for cardiology, though more data will be needed to confirm this conclusion. Dermatology In dermatology, average appointment wait times equaled or exceeded days in all of the metropolitan markets, and equaled or exceeded 2s in 9 of the markets (Boston, Minneapolis, Philadelphia, Denver, Seattle, Portland, New York, Detroit, and Houston). In 9, average wait times in dermatology equaled or exceeded days in 9 of the markets and in 4 average wait times in dermatology equaled or exceeded days in 12 of the markets. The average cumulative wait time to schedule a dermatology appointment in all markets increased in 13 relative to both 9 and 4 (see chart below): Average Dermatology Appointment Wait Times, All Markets YEAR 13 9 4 DAYS 28.8 22.1 24.3 Eleven of the markets showed increases in average wait times for dermatology in 13 relative to 9, and 11 showed increases in average wait times for dermatology relative to 4 (or the wait times did not change). As in cardiology, some markets have exhibited a pattern of relatively long appointment wait times in dermatology. 19 Survey of Physician Appointment Wait Times and Medicaid and Medicare Acceptance Rates