AMA report shows physician Medicare revenue down 19% over first half of 2020
The economic impact of COVID-19 on health care continues to reveal itself through reductions in patient volume and revenue and in higher practice costs. As the pandemic stretches on, physician practice viability remains under threat. Financial impacts were assessed with a claims-based analysis of changes in Medicare physician spending for the first six months of 2020 and a nationwide survey of physicians in July and August of 2020.
Medicare physician spending
The report “Changes in Medicare Physician Spending During the COVID-19 Pandemic” provides an in-depth look at impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on physicians. Using Medicare claims data, the report documents changes in Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS) spending during the first six months of 2020, highlighting the types of service, settings and specialties that were most affected by the pandemic.
Key findings from the report
- MPFS spending dropped sharply in March and April of 2020, falling as much as 57% below expected.
- Although it recovered from the April low, MPFS spending at the end of June 2020 was still 12% less than expected.
- Over the first six months of 2020, the estimated reduction in Medicare physician spending associated with the pandemic was $9.4 billion (19%).
Changes in Medicare physician spending during the COVID-19 pandemic
Learn more about the claims-based analysis of changes in Medicare physician spending.
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Additional key findings
- By specialty, impacts on total spending for the first six months of 2020 ranged from a 6% reduction for Nephrology to a 29% reduction for Ophthalmology and a 34% reduction for physical therapists.
- At the state level, impacts ranged from a 13% reduction in Oklahoma to a 27% reduction in New York.
- Telehealth spending increased from less than 0.1% of total MPFS spending prior to the pandemic to more than 16% in April of 2020, but was concentrated in a handful of service categories.
COVID-19 financial impact survey results
The AMA commissioned a nationwide survey of patient care physicians in July and August of 2020 to assess the financial impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. The results, based on the responses of 3,500 physicians, illustrate the precarious trends and realities facing physician practices.
- 81% of physicians surveyed in July and August of 2020 said revenue was still lower than pre-pandemic.
- Average drop in revenue: 32%
COVID-19 Physician practice financial impact survey results
Learn more about the survey results with in-depth statistics, charts and graphs.
Download the Results
Telehealth coverage
Even with eased telehealth coverage restrictions, telehealth services did not offset reduced in-person patient visits.
- 81% of physicians were still providing fewer in-person visits when surveyed in July and August of 2020 than pre-pandemic.
- Average in-person visits fell from 95 to 57 per week.
- At the height of use, weekly telehealth visits were almost 5 times higher than pre-pandemic.
- At the time of the survey, weekly telehealth visits were still almost 3 times higher than pre-pandemic levels.
- Almost 70% of physicians, despite telehealth increases, were still providing fewer total visits (in-person + telehealth) at the time of the survey than pre-pandemic.
- Average total visits fell from 101 to 72 per week.
Use of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
A significant expense: New safety practices require use of more PPE. Supplies were difficult to acquire—especially for smaller practices that lack purchasing power or vendor relationships to compete with larger health systems in the marketplace.
- 64% of practice owners said that spending on PPE was up from pre-pandemic. Average increase in PPE spending was 57%.
- 36% of physicians said that acquiring PPE was very or extremely difficult. Difficulties were more acute for smaller practices and those that were physician-owned.
Federal financial relief
Federal financial relief early in the pandemic was helpful and appreciated but the core revenue issues these programs were intended to address remain. The vast majority of practice owners said federal financial assistance programs were very or extremely helpful.
Negative impact of COVID-19 on physician practices
It is clear the COVID-19 pandemic continues to have a negative impact on physician practices both in terms of decreased revenue and increased costs. While initial federal financial relief programs were helpful to practices that applied, it appears the road to recovery, particularly for smaller physician-owned practices, remains difficult and more economic relief is needed.