The problem was the non-hospitalists who invested the time and energy to start the hospitalist practice wanted the departing hospitalists to compensate the larger group.
The hospitalists could understand why the other doctors proposed a buyout but wondered what the hospitalists would get in return for paying it. The answer seemed to be not much. They weren’t confident they could recoup their investment by having future hospitalists buy in to the practice (proposing this had scared off more than one recruit), or by selling the practice to another party.
Assess Your Value
The problems faced by both these practices are a result of uncertainty about what their practices are worth.
In the first case, doctors who had the opportunity to buy into the practice were choosing not to because they believed they weren’t going to get anything in return (and had the added burden of putting themselves on the schedule more often to cover open shifts).
Likewise, in the second case the hospitalists agreed it seemed reasonable to pay the other doctors in the parent group to go out on their own. But the hospitalists worried they would never be able to recoup that money by selling shares of the practice to new partner hospitalists or selling the whole group to another entity.
It’s tricky to value any medical practice. A common approach is to put a price on tangible assets owned by the practice (e.g., buildings and equipment like computers and lab apparatus, and the accounts receivable), and the patient base (or good will) the practice has developed.
It isn’t too difficult to come up with a value for tangible assets, and most hospitalist practices have little or nothing in this category (the only hard assets I can think of that I own are my pager, stethoscope, and a couple of lab coats I never wear). Patient lists and good will are particularly difficult to place a value on. Even for a primary care practice with thousands of patient charts, there is no guarantee patients will agree to transfer their care to a purchasing doctor.
For most any kind of medical practice, including a hospitalist group, good will mainly is a function of the referral relationships doctors have developed that ensure a steady flow of patients. Since a steady flow of patients is not a problem for most hospitalist practices (too many patients is more common than too few) the value of that referral stream may not be much.
Another asset many hospitalist practices own is their contract(s) with sponsoring organizations (usually hospitals, but sometimes health plans). They provide for supplemental payments over and above professional fees the practice collects.
This is often a hospitalist practice’s most valuable asset, and it may be worth investing money to acquire. It’s the primary reason large hospitalist staffing companies are willing to pay to acquire local hospitalist practices.
Usually these contracts cannot automatically be assigned to another party without the hospital’s consent. Most hospitals’ loyalty lies with the hospitalists who provide their coverage, not with the company that may hold the contract. For example, with the hospitalists in the second case, their hospital would have been willing to immediately sign a new contract with their spin-off group to maintain their existing hospitalist coverage. The parent group’s hospital contract wasn’t worth acquiring.
All this suggests hospitalist practices may not have much monetary value. That is, an outside party probably wouldn’t pay much to buy your practice. I think this is true for the two practices I describe above. For practices like these, it is probably best to avoid having a buy-in to achieve partner status, and not diverting some practice revenue that would otherwise be used to pay salaries into a “profit” pool from which distributions are made to partners/owners periodically.