• Health affairs · Sep 2020

    Review

    Primary Care Practice Finances In The United States Amid The COVID-19 Pandemic.

    • Sanjay Basu, Russell S Phillips, Robert Phillips, Lars E Peterson, and Bruce E Landon.
    • Sanjay Basu (sanjay_basu@hms.harvard.edu) is vice president of research and population health at Collective Health, in San Francisco, California, and director of research at the Center for Primary Care, Harvard Medical School, in Boston, Massachusetts.
    • Health Aff (Millwood). 2020 Sep 1; 39 (9): 1605-1614.

    AbstractAs a result of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, virtually all in-person outpatient visits were canceled in many parts of the country between March and May 2020. We sought to estimate the potential impact of COVID-19 on the operating expenses and revenues of primary care practices. Using a microsimulation model incorporating national data on primary care use, staffing, expenditures, and reimbursements, including telemedicine visits, we estimated that over the course of calendar year 2020, primary care practices would be expected to lose 67,774 in gross revenue per full-time-equivalent physician (the difference between 2020 gross revenue with COVID-19 and the anticipated gross revenue if COVID-19 had not occurred). We further estimated that the cost at a national level to neutralize the revenue losses caused by COVID-19 among primary care practices would be $15.1 billion. This could more than double if COVID-19 telemedicine payment policies are not sustained.

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