Compensation Study of Vascular Surgeons in the United States.

IF 3.9 2区 医学 Q1 PERIPHERAL VASCULAR DISEASE Journal of Vascular Surgery Pub Date : 2025-01-10 DOI:10.1016/j.jvs.2024.11.042
Keith D Calligaro, Joseph V Lombardi, Bernadette Aulivola, Ali Azizzadeh, Shoma Brahmanandam, Sira Duson, Aakanksha Gupta, Raul Guzman, Mounir Haurani, Krystal Hunter, Geetha Jeyabalan, Judith C Lin, Daniel McDevitt, Richard J Powell, Marc Schermerhorn, Matthew Smeds
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Abstract

Objective: The Society for Vascular Surgery (SVS) partnered with Phairify, Inc, an organization with experience in physician compensation data compilation for several other medical specialties, to survey its membership and assess factors influencing vascular surgeon compensation.

Methods: The SVS Compensation Study Task Force developed a vascular surgery-specific survey between January 2023 and May 2023 including experience level, academic rank, bonuses, incentives, gender, race, ethnicity, geography, on-call pay, and other factors influencing overall reimbursement. After a soft launch on May 1, 2023, with an initial phase of SVS leadership engagement in completion, the survey was formally introduced to the SVS membership on June 14, 2023. Data were collected from May 1, 2023, to December 21, 2023. The survey was intended to focus on total compensation as well as its components. Mean compensation was analyzed based on respondent demographic characteristics.

Results: Of the 3200 active vascular surgery members of the SVS who were invited to participate in the survey, 708 (22%) completed the survey. The respondents were predominantly men (80%, 564) and white (57%, 403) with relatively equal distribution across regions of the United States. Forty-one percent (292) of vascular surgeons had an academic affiliation. Most respondents (85%, 605) work more than 50 hours per week with 13% (92) reporting working more than 80 hours. The vast majority (93%, 660/708) of vascular surgeons took first call for vascular issues at their institutions, of which 64% (422/660) were on call on average 1 in 4 weekday nights and weekends. Most respondents (80%, 545/682) were not paid for primary call separate from their salary. Although there was no difference between white and non-white respondents, the median total compensation for women was less than men ($475,500 vs. $576,000, p < 0.001). Male gender, years in practice, and being in a practice not owned or run by an academic institution were associated with higher compensation based on multivariate linear regression with ranked transfer of data to normalize values. There was no association between compensation and reported number of hours worked per week.

Conclusion: This study highlights vascular surgery specialty-specific compensation models in a variety of practice settings and career levels with greater detail beyond those seen in traditional models. These data can be a useful tool for vascular surgeons when assessing compensation plans from potential employers and may help achieve greater pay equity and workforce diversity.

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美国血管外科医生薪酬研究。
目的:血管外科学会(SVS)与Phairify, Inc合作,对其成员进行调查,并评估影响血管外科医生薪酬的因素。Phairify, Inc是一家在其他几个医学专业的医生薪酬数据汇编方面有经验的组织。方法:SVS薪酬研究工作组于2023年1月至2023年5月开展了一项血管外科专项调查,调查内容包括经验水平、学术等级、奖金、激励、性别、种族、民族、地理、随叫随到工资以及影响总体报销的其他因素。该调查于2023年5月1日进行了试运行,完成了SVS领导参与的初始阶段,并于2023年6月14日正式向SVS成员介绍。数据采集时间为2023年5月1日至2023年12月21日。这项调查的重点是薪酬总额及其组成部分。根据被调查者的人口学特征分析平均薪酬。结果:在被邀请参与调查的3200名活跃的SVS血管外科成员中,有708名(22%)完成了调查。受访者主要是男性(80%,564人)和白人(57%,403人),在美国各地区的分布相对平均。41%(292人)的血管外科医生有学术隶属关系。大多数受访者(85%,605人)每周工作超过50小时,13%(92人)每周工作超过80小时。绝大多数血管外科医生(93%,660/708)在其所在机构接受血管问题的第一次呼叫,其中64%(422/660)在工作日晚上和周末平均每4个工作日就有1个值班。大多数受访者(80%,545/682)的主要电话费用与工资无关。尽管白人和非白人受访者之间没有差异,但女性的总薪酬中位数低于男性(475,500美元对576,000美元,p < 0.001)。基于多变量线性回归,将数据按顺序转移到标准化值,男性、实践年数和非学术机构拥有或经营的实践与更高的薪酬相关。薪酬与报告的每周工作时数之间没有关联。结论:本研究突出了血管外科在各种实践环境和职业水平下的专业补偿模型,比传统模型更详细。这些数据可以成为血管外科医生评估潜在雇主薪酬计划的有用工具,并可能有助于实现更大的薪酬公平和劳动力多样性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
18.60%
发文量
1469
审稿时长
54 days
期刊介绍: Journal of Vascular Surgery ® aims to be the premier international journal of medical, endovascular and surgical care of vascular diseases. It is dedicated to the science and art of vascular surgery and aims to improve the management of patients with vascular diseases by publishing relevant papers that report important medical advances, test new hypotheses, and address current controversies. To acheive this goal, the Journal will publish original clinical and laboratory studies, and reports and papers that comment on the social, economic, ethical, legal, and political factors, which relate to these aims. As the official publication of The Society for Vascular Surgery, the Journal will publish, after peer review, selected papers presented at the annual meeting of this organization and affiliated vascular societies, as well as original articles from members and non-members.
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