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Improving Spine Practice Profits
2012 vs. 2011: 20 Statistics on How
Orthopedist Compensation Changed
By Laura Miller
H
ere are 20 statistics comparing physician compensation in 2012 to 2011,
based on the respective Medscape Physician Compensation Reports.
Orthopedists with compensation increasing
over the previous year
2012: 28 percent
2011: 30 percent
Average orthopedist compensation
2012: $405,000
2011: $315,000
Female orthopedist average compensation
2012: 422,000 (20 percent more then male orthopedists—9 percent of respondents were female)
2011: $240,000 (36 percent less than male orthopedists)
Orthopedists making more than $500,000
2012: 35 percent
2011: 19 percent
Orthopedists making less than $100,000
2012: 11 percent
2011: 19 percent
Orthopedists with compensation decreasing
over the previous year
2012: 39 percent
2011: 36 percent
Highest compensating region
2012: Northwest (Oregon, Washington, Idaho,
Wyoming, Montana, Alaska)—$652,000
2011: West (California, Hawaii)—$350,000
Lowest compensating region
2012: Mid-Atlantic (Pennsylvania, New Jersey,
Delaware, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland,
North Carolina, South Carolina)—$248,000
2011: Northeast (Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, New York, Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
Connecticut)—$303,000
Average hospital compensation for orthopedists
2012: $396,000
2011: $251,000
Average single-specialty group practice
compensation for orthopedists
2012: $469,000
2011: $391,000 n
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