Beyond that, they provide simple, yet sophisticated, technology tools for further patient convenience and savings that allow them to cut administrative overhead by 80% compared to a typical medical practice.
They say doctors-in-training see primary care doctors on the front lines spending their days not only seeing a flood of patients but also dealing more with the insurance company bureaucracies, administrative overhead and related headaches that go along with running a busy practice.
Administrative costs for physicians are in the range of 25-30 percent of practice revenues and insurance-related costs are 15 percent of revenues, according to a National Academy of Social Insurance report for The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.