The RVU compensation model may inadequately capture the comprehensive care provided by advanced heart failure specialists, potentially contributing to physician burnout and declining field interest.
Advanced heart failure
Relative value unit (RVU)-based compensation model vs Salary-based compensation
Physician compensation models in the United States are diverse, shaped by practice settings, specialties, and institutional factors. A notable shift in academic medical centers has been the transition from salary-based compensation to relative value unit (RVU)-based models. While this shift may align compensation with clinical productivity and facilitate budgetary planning, it has profound implications for physician satisfaction, burnout, and clinical practice, particularly in primarily cognitive/nonprocedural based specialties like advanced heart failure (AHF). This article explores the benefits and drawbacks of the RVU model, with a focus on its application in AHF care. The RVU system, designed to measure physician work, practice expenses, and malpractice risk, is associated with efficiency incentives but also risks prioritizing quantity over quality, especially in multidisciplinary fields like AHF. Patients with AHF often have multiple comorbidities requiring extensive management and care coordination across multiple subspecialties, outside of the work effort captured by a clinic visit. The RVU model may undervalue the comprehensive, longitudinal care AHF specialists provide. Through a detailed examination of inpatient and outpatient AHF management, we argue that the RVU model may inadequately capture the full scope of AHF care, which may contribute to systemic challenges, physician burnout, and a decline in interest in AHF subspecialty training. Hence, we call for a reconsideration of AHF physician compensation and productivity measurement that more accurately reflects the full breadth of comprehensive AHF care.
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Nir Uriel
NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital
B. Elad
NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital
Yevgeniy Brailovsky
Heart Failure / Cardiomyopathy
Circulation Heart Failure
University of Michigan
University of Chicago
University of Illinois Chicago
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Uriel et al. (Tue,) conducted a review in Advanced heart failure. Relative value unit (RVU)-based compensation model vs. Salary-based compensation was evaluated. The RVU compensation model may inadequately capture the comprehensive care provided by advanced heart failure specialists, potentially contributing to physician burnout and declining field interest.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8940c6c1944d70ce050c7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/circheartfailure.125.013838