| Impact of tax sanctions on physician practice acquisitions and employment. | |
| | |
MedLine Citation:
|
PMID: 10168441 Owner: NLM Status: MEDLINE |
Abstract/OtherAbstract:
|
The intermediate tax sanctions create significant concerns for tax-exempt healthcare organizations that seek to integrate practicing physicians through practice acquisition or employment. The sanctions will force not-for-profit healthcare organizations to examine both the strategic and business implications of the dollars they have committed to practice acquisition and physician employment. The sanctions also should motivate organizations to reexamine their existing physician compensation arrangements, which may be creating negative incentives for practice productivity. |
| | |
Authors:
|
C T Hardy; S M Lyden; S J Kasmarcak |
Publication Detail:
|
Type: Journal Article |
Journal Detail:
|
Title: Healthcare financial management : journal of the Healthcare Financial Management Association Volume: 51 ISSN: 0735-0732 ISO Abbreviation: Healthc Financ Manage Publication Date: 1997 Jul |
Date Detail:
|
Created Date: 1997-08-21 Completed Date: 1997-08-21 Revised Date: 2007-11-15 |
Medline Journal Info:
|
Nlm Unique ID: 8215859 Medline TA: Healthc Financ Manage Country: UNITED STATES |
Other Details:
|
Languages: eng Pagination: 62, 64-6 Citation Subset: H |
Affiliation:
|
New Health Management Inc., OH, USA. |
Export Citation:
|
APA/MLA Format Download EndNote Download BibTex |
| MeSH Terms | |
Descriptor/Qualifier:
|
Conflict of Interest
/
legislation & jurisprudence* Employment / economics, legislation & jurisprudence* Financial Audit / legislation & jurisprudence Governing Board Guidelines as Topic Hospitals, Voluntary / economics, legislation & jurisprudence* Organizations, Nonprofit / economics, legislation & jurisprudence Practice Management, Medical / economics, legislation & jurisprudence* Salaries and Fringe Benefits / legislation & jurisprudence Tax Exemption / legislation & jurisprudence* United States |
From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine
Previous Document: How intermediate sanctions change the dynamics of healthcare transactions.
Next Document: Avoiding managed care pricing pitfalls.