PODCAST · business
Wisdom. Applied.
by Mark F. Weiss
Podcast by Mark F. Weiss
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500
You’re Not Negotiating What You Think You Are
Physician groups often believe they’re negotiating price when, in reality, they’re negotiating value, positioning, and long-term relationships. The groups that succeed understand that contracts aren’t commodity transaction, and that the outcome is shaped long before negotiations begin.
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499
Utah Called It A Sandbox. Your Patients Are In It.
Utah has launched a program allowing AI to process prescription refills, but without clear regulatory authority or defined liability.
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498
AI in Medicine: Physician as Puppet or Physician as Puppet Master?
AI can either tighten institutional control over physicians or restore autonomy and human‑centered care. The difference isn’t technology, it’s who holds the strings.
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497
How to Escape the Factory-ification of Healthcare
Many physicians leave hospital or private‑equity owned practices only to recreate the same factory model they wanted to escape. Real differentiation comes from rejecting throughput medicine in favor of human‑centered care.
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496
The Clinical AI Liability Gap
AI may assist clinicians, but replacing them creates a liability gap. Malpractice caps protect physicians, not algorithms, and the risk exposure is unlimited.
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495
The FTC Just Told You Exactly What It’s Looking For. Is Your Noncompete on the List?
The FTC has abandoned a blanket ban on noncompetes, but is aggressively enforcing them in healthcare. What physician groups and physicians need to know now.
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494
AI Isn’t Going to Replace Your Radiologists. It’s Going to Reprice Them.
AI won’t replace radiologists, but it will change throughput, FTE math, and leverage in hospital contracts. Groups that ignore this will lose negotiating ground.
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493
The Anesthesia Workforce Shortage Is Your Group’s Negotiating Leverage (If You Know How to Use It)
Nearly 30% of anesthesiologists are projected to leave practice by 2033, creating a workforce shortage hospitals can’t ignore. How can hospital-based groups can turn the reality into real negotiating leverage — before the window closes.
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492
The Problem With Hospital–Physician “Alignment”
Hospitals talk about “alignment,” but when leadership changes or incentives shift, the relationship often looks very different.
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491
The Essential Money Discussion - A Conversation with Financial Planner Justin Harvey
Mark F. Weiss sat down to chat with Justin Harvey, ChFC, CFP, a well-known financial planner whose practice focuses heavily on working with anesthesiologists and pain management physicians, about preserving wealth, not just accumulating it. The talk centered on the importance of having hard money conversations to keep your family together. Get in touch with Justin Harvey: https://www.linkedin.com/in/justin-harvey-46625516/ https://apm-wealth.com/ Sign up to receive complimentary educational materials at: http://www.weisspc.com/subscribe http://www.weisspc.com
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490
A Novel Approach to ASC Structure: Distributions In Proportion to Production.
Four surgeons practicing together, ophthalmologists, for example, plan to build their own ASC. It goes without saying that they would think that distributions from their ASC must be in proportion to ownership interests. But that’s not necessarily true.
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489
Breaking Down the Breakdown – ER Group Terminated After 35 Years
When a hospital system terminates a 35‑year relationship with its ER group, it tells you far more about leadership than about performance.
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488
Is the Prohibition on Physician-Owned Hospitals Worsening the Hospital-Based Specialist Shortage?
Does banning physician-owned hospitals worsen shortages? Explore how ownership limits affect hospital-based coverage and alignment models.
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487
“You Can Trust Us” Is Not a Contract Term
Time and again, physician group leaders, smart, experienced, and otherwise hard-nosed, regularly fall prey to a simple proposition when dealing with hospitals: “You can trust us.”
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486
Protecting the Group from Distracted Doctoring
When distraction in patient care leads to criminal charges, medical groups face serious risk. Learn how distracted doctoring exposes physicians and groups alike.
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485
Five Ophthalmology Practices See Eye to Eye in False Claims Act Settlement
Five ophthalmology practices agreed to pay nearly $6M over alleged kickbacks and unnecessary testing. Learn the FCA risks every physician group must understand.
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484
When Is a Letter “Mailed”? Postmarks, Contracts, and a Quiet USPS Change with Real Consequences
USPS postmark delays can make timely contract notices look late. Learn why this matters to protect deadlines and reduce legal risk.
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483
Physicians Fooled into the Ruse of Health System Reform (or, Cows Can’t Reform a Farm Because Farmers Will Never Eat Grass)
Hospitals can’t be reformed. Committees create the illusion of influence, not authority. The real solution? Exit—and build independence.
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482
Off to Prison. An Update on How to Almost Make Half a Billion Dollars: The Arizona Wound Graft Fraud
Now that they’ve been sentenced to prison, I can reveal the fate of the healthcare power couple, Alexandra Gehrke and her husband, Jeffrey King, whose wound care graft graft put close to $615,000,000 in their pockets, albeit temporarily.
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481
Inside the 2026 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule
Mark Weiss and Jason Almiro (Quantum Health Advisors) sit down for a candid conversation on the major changes in Medicare’s 2026 Physician Fee Schedule—what’s new, what’s gone, and what entrepreneurial physicians need to know now.
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480
Hospitals and the Return of the Company Town
Are hospitals becoming modern company towns for physicians? Explore the parallels, risks, and emerging alternatives for independence.
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479
Cognitive Biases and Contracting
When you’re negotiating for any agreement, any deal, especially one that is creating an ongoing relationship, which is the hot molten center of services agreements such as exclusive contracts, you not only want to, but you need to, play to human cognitive biases in establishing that relationship.
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478
Supermodel Your Way to Healthcare Industry Success
Few doubt that things need fixing in healthcare. But many, from DIYer docs to industry leaders, suffer from being inside an echo chamber.
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477
How to Use the Law Before it Uses You.
Some laws derive from morality and others are purely the result of politicking and protectionism.
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476
Leadership Succession: The Hole You Never Notice Until You Fall Into It
Medical groups don’t usually collapse because their revenue dropped 3% last quarter. They collapse because someone, usually someone important, disappears, and no one bothered to think about what happens next.
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475
The Healthcare Deal Partner Who Can End Your Career
In healthcare deals, one bad partner—or one bad flip—can end the game.
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474
THE TIME TO ESTABLISH A BANKING RELATIONSHIP (NOT WHAT YOU LIKELY HAVE NOW) IS TODAY, NOT WHEN YOU NEED ONE
Is your medical group’s bank just holding your money—or helping you grow? Strategic banking relationships can unlock leverage, improve deal flow, and strengthen your group’s financial position.
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473
Surprise: The No Surprises Act Is Working, Just Not How Insurers Planned
The No Surprises Act wasn’t about patients. The fine print told a different tale: it was an insurer-protection law.
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472
Why You Must Understand that the Law is Not Necessarily Your Reality
The law isn’t physics—it’s power, people, and positioning. For physicians and medical groups, the best legal outcomes start with smart planning.
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471
Do You Know What Block Can’t be Pulled From the Deal?
Contracts in healthcare are built like block towers—each deal-point matters. Remove the wrong one, and the entire structure may collapse.
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470
Signaling During Medical Group Negotiations
Dogs wag their tails. Humans do too—just not the same way. In negotiations, your counterpart is sending signals you might be missing. Learn how to spot the “tail tells,” control your own, and use them to your advantage.
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469
Preparation Wins Games and Negotiations
Most healthcare negotiations fail before they begin—because leaders don’t prepare. Learn how physician groups can approach contract talks like elite athletes: with strategy, rehearsal, and a winning mindset.
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468
Non-Competes After the FTC’s Pivot: A Balancing Act for Medical Group Leaders
Non-Competes After the FTC’s Pivot: A Balancing Act for Medical Group Leaders by Mark F. Weiss
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467
The FTC Buries Its Ban on Non-Competes, But Sharpens its Aim on Violations
FTC ditches a full non-compete ban, but healthcare employers still face targeted crackdowns. Physician groups, take note.
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466
From Kings to Contracts: No Love Lost
Even the strongest physician-hospital relationships are transactional. Survival depends on diversification, not loyalty myths.
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465
The Anti-RFP: Forward and Reverse Auctions for Physician Services
Several years ago, it would’ve been difficult to write too much about the strategy of responding to an RFP, i.e., a request for proposal, for physician services. Today, however, with an extreme shortage of physicians, RFPs are not so much a thing.
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464
$500 Million in Alleged Phony Charges and the Dangers of Medical Directorship
$500 Million in Alleged Phony Charges and the Dangers of Medical Directorship by Mark F. Weiss
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463
The Prevailing Healthcare Business Model is Upside Down
Some models were once useful, but no longer are. How’s the “reliant on Medicare”, or even the “reliant on commercial payors”, model working out for you?
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462
Will Your Business Walk Back in in the Morning?
Your business exists and interfaces on multiple planes and, therefore, the far smarter approach is to explore and adopt protection on each.
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461
Double Trouble: Prosecuted and Sued for the Same Scam
Out of state and still billing for in-person care? A physician submitted claims while vacationing in Hawaii—and now faces criminal sentencing and a $500k civil payout.
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460
You Can't Lipstick That Pig: Why Physicians Must Carefully Vet Deals
Deals involving management services agreements, consulting contracts, or similar structures can appear completely legal at first glance. But dig deeper, and they might turn out to be elaborate covers for kickbacks or bribes.
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459
Healthcare Fraud and the Physician as Victim
The majority of healthcare fraud schemes center on fraud perpetrated by physicians, but what about schemes orchestrated to victimize physicians?
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458
The Nation’s Largest Health Care Fraud Bust, Plus Bureaucratic Negligence
It’s been said that people read published lists of disciplined fellow professionals out of a sense of schadenfreude, the pleasure derived from another’s misfortune.
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457
Why Fail at Optionality?
Although dollars are a lubricant, the real issue is freedom or optionality.
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456
Speak Truth to Numbers
Bureaucratic sorts are drawn to numbers because numbers can be gathered and processed and manipulated, all with the goal of lifetime employment for those bean counters.
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455
A Ban on PE in Medical Practice and a Gutting of Practice Value
Certainly, Oregon is a small state in terms of medical practice, but what’s happened in Oregon could, and some say will, spread across the country.
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454
Pain Doc Likely in Pain After Settling Allegations That Billed Procedures Weren’t Performed
Was it a scam or an error? A settlement is just that and there’s been no determination of liability. Neither you nor I can know for sure what went on, but either way, there’s a lesson here about billing compliance.
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453
Why Hospital-Based Medical Groups Must Exploit Honey Bee Strategy
Considering honey bees have been on earth for between 40 to 150 million years, it pays to consider their hive strategy for success, especially because it maps perfectly onto medical groups.
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452
14 Month Prison Term in “Doctor Chasing” Scam
There’s huge danger in any arrangement in which you put your prescribing imprimatur on any script or order for any item, especially those reimbursed by Medicare.
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451
DOJ to Focus on Criminal Healthcare Fraud and Prosecuting the Individuals Involved
In real life healthcare compliance, there's no get out of jail free card.
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