Non-hospitalists, on average, make $4,400 more than hospitalists across nine specialties (emergency medicine, anesthesiology, critical care, OB/GYN, internal medicine, neurology, psychiatry, family medicine and pediatrics), based on "Medscape Hospitalist Compensation Report 2016."
Here are 18 statistics:
Emergency medicine hospitalists make an average of $304,000, compared to non-hospitalists making $323,000.
Hospitalist anesthesiologists, on average, made $301,000, lower than non-hospitalist anesthesiologists ($365,000).
For critical care providers, hospitalists made an average of $290,000 and non-hospitalists made $310,000.
OB/GYN hospitalists made $272,000, marginally less than their non-hospitalist counterparts ($278,000).
Internal medicine hospitalists had an average compensation of $243,000 and internal medicine non-hospitalists made $211,000.
Neurologist hospitalists had an average compensation of $242,000, and non-hospitalist neurologists had an average compensation of $241,000.
Psychiatrist hospitalists made an average of $233,000, compared to non-hospitalists who made an average of $225,000.
For family medicine physicians, hospitalists made an average of $232,000 compared to non-hospitalists who made $205,000, on average.
Pediatric hospitalists made an average of $205,000 compared to their non-hospitalists counterparts who had an average compensation of $204,000.
More healthcare news:
Kyphoplasty procedure now being performed at Capstone Pain & Spine — 3 notes
Tenet senior strategic advisor Reginald Ballantyne III to leave in June — 5 key points
9 statistics on ASC operating expenses: Salary & benefits, occupancy, medical supplies