18 Statistics on Gastroenterology Compensation

Here are 18 statistics on gastroenterology compensation, according to the Medscape Gastroenterology Report 2012. Note: The figures represent the average of each statistic.

1. Compensation: $303,000 annually
2. 39 percent said compensation stayed the same as last year
3. 32 percent said compensation declined
4. 28 percent said compensation increased
5. Male gastroenterologist compensation was $315,000
6. Female gastroenterologist compensation was $249,000
7. Male gastroenterologists earned 27 percent more than their female counterparts
8. States with highest yearly income: Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington and Wyoming at $372,000
9. States with the lowest yearly income: North Dakota, South Dakota, Missouri, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska at $195,000
10. Setting with the highest earnings: single-specialty group practices at $409,000
11. Setting with the lowest earnings: academic at $176,000
12. 51 percent of GI surgeons felt fairly compensated
13. 23 percent of GI surgeons reported working with patients 30 to 40 hours weekly
14. 20 percent reported working with patients 40 to 45 hours weekly
15. 18 percent reported working with patients 46 to 50 hours weekly
16. 24 percent of GI surgeons reported 50 to 75 patient visits per week
17. 20 percent of GI surgeons reported 100 to 174 visits per week
18. 10 percent reported fewer than 25 visits per week

More Articles on Compensation:
15 Findings From Physician Trends Report
Administrators of Small Physician Practices Record 4.8% Spike in Compensation
15 Statistics on Surgery Center EBITDA



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