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ER doctors in frontline battle against COVID-19 are facing pay cuts
Alabama Political Reporter ^ | April 9, 2020 | Bill Britt

Posted on 04/09/2020 5:59:32 PM PDT by nickcarraway

Emergency room doctors across the nation are experiencing cuts to pay, benefits and hours even as they battle COVID-19. Suddenly ER doctors in Alabama are facing the same slashes to their income.

“It’s crazy, cutting hours and pay right as hell breaks loose,” said an Alabama ER doctor who has spent the last month treating COVID-19 patients. “We are putting ourselves at risk, reusing supplies and dealing with constant uncertainty, and this is how we are treated.”

Healthcare professionals quoted in this report have asked that they not be identified by name because many hospitals have forbidden staff from speaking directly to the press.

“Testing is still so limited and the numbers are so inaccurate, and they don’t want the public to know how bad it is, so they tell us to shut up,” said an ER healthcare worker. “Now they are cutting our hours and pay, what are we supposed to do? I’m so frustrated.”

In other states, health system CEOs and leadership are forgoing or donating pay during the COVID-19 outbreak as systems face furloughing workers due to low revenue, according to a report in Fierce Healthcare.

Mount Sinai, a healthcare network in New York City, announced last week that the system’s leadership team would take a 50 percent pay cut “for as long as necessary so that these dollars can be directed to our front lines in this fight.”

Erlanger Health System, a seven-hospital system in Tennessee and North Carolina, announced March 30 it is reducing leadership pay as have other systems throughout the country.

Here in Alabama, cash strapped hospitals are cutting some frontline workers’ pay first while administrators so far have not offered to reduce their salaries to help those working in the middle of the calamity.

Over half of Alabama’s hospitals were already facing financial difficulties before the coronavirus struck.

About 52 percent of the state’s hospitals had negative total margins before COVID-19, and 75 percent of them had negative operating margins before the outbreak, according to a report by APR‘s Chip Brownlee.

Layoffs and potential closures: Alabama hospitals strapped for cash More than half of Alabama’s hospitals were already in a precarious situation before coronavirus. According to Brownlee’s report, nearly 90 percent of rural hospitals had negative operating margins before the COVID-19 pandemic invaded Alabama.

The recent $2.2 trillion stimulus bill known in congressional circles as COVID 3 was created in part to reimburse hospitals and other health providers to offer compensation for losses and additional expenses at the local level.

“The 2 trillion dollar package we passed — hospitals, health care facilities will get about $133 billion,” Alabama’s Democratic U.S. Sen. Doug Jones told APR in a phone conversation Wednesday evening. “That will be divvied up by the states and there’s a formula that they’ll use. Every hospital that’s dealing with this should get some of that money. That will help them in one way dealing with this crisis.”

But money from the stimulus package is slowly flowing and hospital administrators are not confident how much money they will receive. But even when the funds from COVID 3 are fully allocated, it will not be enough to fill the gaping hole in hospital budgets Jones believes.

“We all recognize that this [COVID 3] is not enough,” said Jones. “We’re going to have to put out some more money to help shore up these hospitals. So many of them have been operating in the red.”

In an effort to reduce stress on the state’s hospitals, all elective services were canceled. Elective surgeries, along with health and wellness programs, are profit centers for hospitals.

In some cases, more patients are coming into the hospitals, but they are not there for the high-profit procedures; they are sick needing immediate care.

“Now they’re focused on saving Alabamians, saving Americans, and so we’ve got to do our part to help backfill — we can’t afford to lose doctors and get them out of the profession,” said Jones. “We’ve already got a shortage. So we’re doing things I think to help that in COVID 3, and I think that’s going to be included in COVID 4.”

Senate Democrats are proposing that the fourth COVID-19 stimulus bill include additional pay for doctors, nurses, grocery-store workers, and other workers whose jobs are deemed essential.

“We are here at the hospital trying to help patients, protect the public and do our jobs under unbelievable circumstances,” said an ER doctor. “Who is watching out for us? Nobody?”

Jones says help is on its way but more must be done going forward.

“So now, people understand that your neighbor’s health — your health — is dependent on your neighbor’s health,” said Jones.

COVID-19 has exposed severe cracks in the state’s healthcare system. Jones sees expanding Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act as a vital part of restoring Alabama’s healthcare system while offering much needed relief to all individuals affected by COVID-19.

“This has shone a light on the deficiencies in our system,” said Jones. “This has shone a light on the racial disparities in urban and rural areas. Everybody in Alabama, and America, has an opportunity to fix it,” said Jones. “We must act now.”

Not all Alabama hospitals are cutting ER doctors’ pay, hours, or benefits, but for many healthcare professionals on the frontlines, they now have one more thing to worry about — paying the bills.

Update: East Alabama Medical Center in Opelika, Alabama, announced after APR published this story that its leaders were taking a temporary reduction in pay in order to prevent cutting pay for frontline staff.

EAMC President and CEO Laura Grill explained the decision, “In an attempt to avoid impacting frontline staff as we are seeing elsewhere in Alabama and across the country, we are making some temporary pay cuts. I asked our senior leadership team to take the first cut and then we asked our employed physicians as well. Then, yesterday, we communicated a reduction in pay to the rest of our leadership team—our directors and managers. I am very hopeful that these cuts will be temporary and that business will return to normal in the near future. However, leadership starts with all of us. I am immensely proud of our team and entire organization, and thankful for the support of our community as we navigate these challenges.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Health/Medicine
KEYWORDS: coronavirus; covid19; doctors
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To: nickcarraway

So there’s less openings in that field.


21 posted on 04/09/2020 9:14:36 PM PDT by Hillarys Gate Cult
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To: nickcarraway

I could see that, but not an ER Dr.


22 posted on 04/09/2020 10:37:25 PM PDT by Robert DeLong
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To: Robert DeLong

I don’t think so, I am sure their revenues are tanking just like everyone elses..

When you tell everyone to stay home and put of elective things.. you wind up with fewer visits to hospitals, period.

Fewer car wrecks, fewer sporting accidents, fewer overall transmissions of diseases... etc...

I have no doubt hospitals have seen their revenues fall substantially in the past month or so.


23 posted on 04/09/2020 10:43:02 PM PDT by HamiltonJay
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To: nickcarraway

Every other surgery being done in hospitals has been cancelled SO no insurance payments coming in the ONLY patients are Covid patients being paid by the government at MUCH LOWER rates AND then to top it all off the hospitals are half empty because there are not enough Covid patients!! This entire mess is on Fauci hands because of his completely FAKE models!! Every damn section of our economy has been destroyed by this tiny little USELESS BASTARD!!!


24 posted on 04/09/2020 10:50:51 PM PDT by Trump Girl Kit Cat (Yosemite Sam raising hell)
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To: nickcarraway
BS - my daughter is a nurse and the delaying of a lot of elective crap has resulted in a lot of folks to be sitting idle - they cur my daughter's hours and she got with her recruiter (she is good and gets recruitment/headhunter offers all the time) and the recruiter pointed out there's not a part of the hospital she's not qualified for - OR/ER/ICU/Floor and other areas could use folks so she got her hours back and "floats" between floors as required.

The ones complaining have likely not broadened their skill sets.

25 posted on 04/10/2020 4:12:14 AM PDT by trebb (Don't howl about illegal leeches, or Trump in general, while not donating to FR - it's hypocritical.)
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To: HamiltonJay

But this article is not talking about those doctors, they are talking about ER doctors, who supposedly are on the front line dealing with Covid-19 patients.


26 posted on 04/10/2020 6:12:41 AM PDT by Robert DeLong
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To: Robert DeLong

Who do you think pays ER Docs? Hospitals do.. if hospitals are seeing fewer patients because no one is out living their lives... like the examples I cited.. fewer car wrecks, fewer work accidents, fewer overall infections etc... the hospital has fewer customers, and a lower revenue stream... For larger hospital system this is less of a concern, as they will have resources to survive a drought, smaller and community hospitals are often BREAK EVEN at BEST, even when times are good.


27 posted on 04/10/2020 6:22:54 AM PDT by HamiltonJay
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To: Robert DeLong

no hospital and doctor’s offices are empty despite all the talk about ‘frontlines’ ‘battles’ ‘overwhelmed’ etc. Nurse are being laid off or having hours cut, as are doctors I’m sure. My wife has been a nurse for 35 years, she’s working half time next week, worked 3 days this week.

We’ve been fed lots of fake news about the lack of beds, doctors, nurses, ventilators etc.


28 posted on 04/10/2020 9:53:23 AM PDT by allwrong57
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