Group Practice with Neal Goldstein

Partner Admission:  Admitting an employed physician into partnership

21 min · 16. juni 2026
episode Partner Admission:  Admitting an employed physician into partnership cover

Beskrivelse

Most medical groups assume new partners must buy into the practice’s real estate, but that expectation might be turning away top doctors. Neal Goldstein breaks down the complexities of admitting an employed physician into partnership at a medical group practice. This episode explores the exact timeline, criteria, and ancillary venture rules you need to structure a safe and profitable partner admission. What you will learn: ● The eligibility period for partnership depends heavily on market dynamics and the size of the buy-in amount. ● A doctor’s productivity and clinical quality serve as the baseline business criteria for partnership. ● Treating staff rudely is a massive red flag that must be corrected sternly before an employed doctor is promoted. ● Medical groups should consider carving out real estate ownership so buy-ins remain affordable for new partners. ● Anti-kickback safe harbors strictly prevent a group practice from financing a new partner’s surgery center buy-in. ● The “income partner” model used by law firms can help medical groups retain talent without giving away voting rights. Timestamps: 00:00 — When is an employed physician eligible for partnership? 03:55 — The business criteria for making an employed doctor a partner 07:00 — Why acceptance by patients and staff is critical for promotion 09:47 — Should new practice partners buy into the medical real estate? 11:58 — Anti-kickback safe harbors and surgery center ownership 15:47 — How the income partner model works for medical groups Neal Goldstein is an experienced healthcare attorney, legal strategist, and board member specializing in medical practice structures. He served as the structural engineer for the founding of the Illinois Bone and Joint Institute and has provided guidance on healthcare governance through his work on hospital system boards. His work focuses on navigating the Stark Law, corporate practice of medicine doctrines, and professional risk management Website: https://www.pfs-law.com/ Website: https://www.goldsteingrouppractice.com/ Website: https://nealtgoldstein.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/neal-t-goldstein-841aa652/ Show subscribe and platform links New episodes every week — subscribe so you never miss a conversation on the business of medicine. Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube Disclaimer This episode is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or medical advice. #MedicalPractice #PhysicianPartnership #HealthcareLaw #PracticeManagement #MedicalGroup #SurgeryCenter #NealGoldstein #GroupPractice #IncomePartner #HealthcareBusiness

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18 Episoder

episode Partner Admission:  Admitting an employed physician into partnership cover

Partner Admission:  Admitting an employed physician into partnership

Most medical groups assume new partners must buy into the practice’s real estate, but that expectation might be turning away top doctors. Neal Goldstein breaks down the complexities of admitting an employed physician into partnership at a medical group practice. This episode explores the exact timeline, criteria, and ancillary venture rules you need to structure a safe and profitable partner admission. What you will learn: ● The eligibility period for partnership depends heavily on market dynamics and the size of the buy-in amount. ● A doctor’s productivity and clinical quality serve as the baseline business criteria for partnership. ● Treating staff rudely is a massive red flag that must be corrected sternly before an employed doctor is promoted. ● Medical groups should consider carving out real estate ownership so buy-ins remain affordable for new partners. ● Anti-kickback safe harbors strictly prevent a group practice from financing a new partner’s surgery center buy-in. ● The “income partner” model used by law firms can help medical groups retain talent without giving away voting rights. Timestamps: 00:00 — When is an employed physician eligible for partnership? 03:55 — The business criteria for making an employed doctor a partner 07:00 — Why acceptance by patients and staff is critical for promotion 09:47 — Should new practice partners buy into the medical real estate? 11:58 — Anti-kickback safe harbors and surgery center ownership 15:47 — How the income partner model works for medical groups Neal Goldstein is an experienced healthcare attorney, legal strategist, and board member specializing in medical practice structures. He served as the structural engineer for the founding of the Illinois Bone and Joint Institute and has provided guidance on healthcare governance through his work on hospital system boards. His work focuses on navigating the Stark Law, corporate practice of medicine doctrines, and professional risk management Website: https://www.pfs-law.com/ Website: https://www.goldsteingrouppractice.com/ Website: https://nealtgoldstein.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/neal-t-goldstein-841aa652/ Show subscribe and platform links New episodes every week — subscribe so you never miss a conversation on the business of medicine. Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube Disclaimer This episode is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or medical advice. #MedicalPractice #PhysicianPartnership #HealthcareLaw #PracticeManagement #MedicalGroup #SurgeryCenter #NealGoldstein #GroupPractice #IncomePartner #HealthcareBusiness

16. juni 202621 min
episode How to Survive the Rollercoaster of a Malpractice Lawsuit with Bill Rogers cover

How to Survive the Rollercoaster of a Malpractice Lawsuit with Bill Rogers

Most doctors think a malpractice lawsuit will ruin their life. But the truth is, you are statistically more likely to win than lose. Bill Rogers is a veteran medical malpractice defense lawyer and partner at Swanson, Martin and Bell in Chicago. In this episode, he breaks down the reality of facing a lawsuit, the emotional toll it takes on physicians, and the strategic secrets to winning in front of a jury. What you will learn: ● Why doctors actually win 65 to 75 percent of medical malpractice jury trials in Cook County. ● The predictable emotional rollercoaster every first-time defendant experiences. ● Why plaintiffs typically win “carpentry plumbing” cases, but lose “question of judgment” cases. ● The reason why highly-paid expert witnesses often cancel each other out in the eyes of a jury. ● How a doctor’s inability to admit a harmless mistake can completely destroy their case. ● Why having mutual respect for opposing plaintiff’s counsel is a strategic advantage, not a weakness. Timestamps: 00:00 — Meet Medical Malpractice Defense Lawyer Bill Rogers 03:00 — The First Conversation With a Sued Doctor 04:00 — Why Doctors Win 65-75% of Jury Trials 05:00 — The Emotional Rollercoaster of a Lawsuit 11:00 — The 3 Categories of Malpractice Cases 20:00 — Why Expert Witnesses Cancel Each Other Out 26:00 — Why You Must Respect the Plaintiff’s Bar 30:00 — The Difference Between A Cause and The Cause Guest bio: Bill Rogers is a partner at Swanson, Martin and Bell in Chicago, specializing in defending doctors against medical malpractice claims for decades. He is a fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers and the recipient of the JVR Trial Lawyer Excellence Lifetime Achievement Award. He has held leadership positions in the American Board of Trial Advocates and the Society of Trial Lawyers. Website: smbtrials.com/brogers LinkedIn: /in/william-j-rogers-664ba625 Show subscribe and platform links New episodes every week — subscribe so you never miss a conversation on the business of medicine. Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube Disclaimer This episode is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or medical advice. #MedicalMalpractice #HealthcareLaw #PhysicianLife #DoctorLawsuit #MedicalDefense #TrialLawyer #GroupPracticePodcast #BillRogers

9. juni 202636 min
episode Professional Risk Management cover

Professional Risk Management

The litigation tracker template built by expert group practice consultants is the single most effective tool for lowering medical malpractice payouts. In this episode, veteran practice advisor Neal Goldstein breaks down the operational blueprint for running an active, proactive professional risk management program. Discover how medical groups can leverage clinical data, maintain strict defense postures, and audit insurance carriers to institutionalize quality improvement across their entire organization. What you will learn: ● Why treating risk management as a proactive business strategy directly increases clinical quality across medical practices ● The exact columns your litigation tracker needs to isolate dangerous recurring claim trends ● How hospital co-defendants can settle secretly and leave individual physicians vulnerable during malpractice trials ● Why a 2-year gap between the date of loss and filing reveals weak, shopped-around claims ● The operational math check required to catch hidden insurance carrier errors on loss run reports ● How to build an exclusive panel of competitive defense counsel to strengthen your legal positioning ● The critical reason non-physician risk managers require a respected physician champion to implement systemic clinical changes Timestamps: 00:00 — Managing Malpractice Risk as a Business Strategy 01:45 — The Dual Benefits of Quality Improvement and Lower Premiums 03:32 — Designing an Active Litigation Tracker Worksheet 05:12 — Spotting Failure to Diagnose Trends and Coding Issues 09:24 — Tracking Closed Cases, Dismissals, and Settlement Dispositions 11:36 — Managing Precautionary Claims and Suboptimal Outcomes 14:12 — The Full-Time Risk Manager Job Description 17:15 — Auditing Loss Run Reports and Insurance Carrier Reserves 20:44 — How Bad Actor Expert Witness Testimony Damages the Profession 23:22 — Establishing Competitive Panel Counsel for Stronger Defense 25:31 — The Vital Role of a Physician Champion Leader Neal Goldstein is an experienced healthcare attorney, legal strategist, and board member specializing in medical practice structures. He served as the structural engineer for the founding of the Illinois Bone and Joint Institute and has provided guidance on healthcare governance through his work on hospital system boards. His work focuses on navigating the Stark Law, corporate practice of medicine doctrines, and professional risk management. Website: https://www.pfs-law.com/ Website: https://www.goldsteingrouppractice.com/ Website: https://nealtgoldstein.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/neal-t-goldstein-841aa652/ Show subscribe and platform links New episodes every week — subscribe so you never miss a conversation on the business of medicine. Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube Disclaimer This episode is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or medical advice. #MalpracticeDefense #RiskManagement #MedicalPractice #HealthcareOperations #PhysicianLeadership #GroupPractice #InsurancePremiums #HealthcareQuality #MedicalLawyer #LitigationTracker #PhysicianRisk #NeilGoldstein

2. juni 202627 min
episode A Medical Group is a Business Arrangement cover

A Medical Group is a Business Arrangement

Most healthcare leaders treat medical groups like clinical entities. Legal and financial experts know they are actually structured as business arrangements. Neil Goldstein breaks down the operational paradigm of physician group ownership. Learn how the separation of clinical functions from business structures allows healthcare practices to maximize operational efficiency and growth under modern regulatory frameworks. What you will learn: ● Why ancient laws governing fee splitting and corporate medicine force unique legal structures on private equity groups ● The critical operational differences between highly regulated hospital systems and state-licensed physician groups ● How the federal Stark Law explicitly targets the business elements of group practices rather than clinical care ● Why CMS removed centralized utilization review from the unified business definition in the phase two regulations ● How non-physician owners can properly evaluate organizational structures and quality metrics without crossing clinical boundaries ● The unique governance model that allows business executives to support doctors while preserving patient care delivery ● How institutionalizing professional risk management programs directly lowers malpractice claims and secures financial operations 00:00 — Corporate Practice of Medicine and Private Equity Group Ownership Structure 01:18 — Illinois Bone and Joint Institute Founding and Structural Engineering Story 02:51 — Deloitte Technical Review Executive Edward Goldstein Leadership Lessons 03:51 — Small Business Outsourcing CFO Work and Accounting History for Physicians 04:43 — Hospital System Quality Committee Board Governance Versus Physician Group Licensure 05:58 — Stark Law Group Practice Definition and Unified Business Regulation Analysis 06:49 — CMS Phase Two Regulations and Centralized Utilization Review History 08:11 — Separate Clinical Side From Business Side Optimization Strategies 09:07 — Physician Accountability Governance and Non-Physician Executive Roles 10:51 — Professional Risk Management and Medical Malpractice Claims Reduction Neil Goldstein is an experienced healthcare attorney, legal strategist, and board member specializing in medical practice structures. He served as the structural engineer for the founding of the Illinois Bone and Joint Institute and has provided guidance on healthcare governance through his work on hospital system boards. His work focuses on navigating the Stark Law, corporate practice of medicine doctrines, and professional risk management. Website: https://www.pfs-law.com/ Website: https://www.goldsteingrouppractice.com/ Website: https://nealtgoldstein.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/neal-t-goldstein-841aa652/ Show subscribe and platform links New episodes every week — subscribe so you never miss a conversation on the business of medicine. Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube Disclaimer This episode is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or medical advice.

26. mai 202612 min
episode Fee Splitting/Corporate Practice of Medicine Laws, and the Business of Healthcare cover

Fee Splitting/Corporate Practice of Medicine Laws, and the Business of Healthcare

Most healthcare founders think corporate ownership of medical practices is strictly illegal. The truth is much more complex. Healthcare attorney Neal Goldstein breaks open the state-level laws governing Fee Splitting and the Corporate Practice of Medicine (CPM). In this episode, he strips away the legal fluff to reveal the exact structural workarounds private equity firms use to acquire, manage, and scale medical groups across the United States. If you are trying to understand how modern medical groups are actually financed and structured, this breakdown is for you. What you will learn: ● Why Fee Splitting and CPM are strictly state-level laws with massive enforcement differences across the country ● The critical difference between statutory licensing laws and evolutional common case law in healthcare compliance ● How the historic Berlin v. Sarah Bush Lincoln case accidentally banned hospitals from employing doctors in Illinois ● The exact mechanics of the “Friendly PC / MSO” contract model used to legally bypass corporate ownership bans ● Why structuring a management fee based on a medical practice’s direct profits triggers massive regulatory risks ● The hidden economic reasons why these antiquated 1990s laws remain on the books despite structural changes in GDP ● A collaborative boardroom framework inspired by hospital medical staffs to balance corporate scale with clinical quality Timestamps 00:00 — The Stark Reality of Fee Splitting and Corporate Medicine Statutes 01:22 — Statutory Fee Splitting vs Common Law CPM Compliance 03:06 — Navigating Section 22.2 of the Illinois Medical Practice Act 05:00 — The True Policy and History Behind the Corporate Practice of Medicine 07:26 — The Berlin v. Sarah Bush Lincoln Appellate Decision and Fallout 09:58 — State Enforcement Spectrum: High Risk vs Low Risk Jurisdictions 13:36 — How Private Equity Structures Corporate Healthcare Transactions legally 13:54 — The Friendly PC and MSO Legal Agreement Mechanics 16:36 — Fair Market Value Pitfalls in Management Fee Structuring 18:13 — Why Outdated Healthcare Licensing Laws Still Exist on the Books 22:00 — A Better Boardroom Framework for Medical Group Quality Assurance 25:58 — Wrap Up: Private Equity in Modern Medical Group Ownership Guest Bio: Neal Goldstein is an expert healthcare transaction attorney specializing in regulatory compliance, medical group mergers and acquisitions, and corporate structuring for group practices. Over a multi-decade legal career, he has advised healthcare systems, physicians, and private equity platforms on navigating the complex intersection of corporate scaling and clinical compliance. Website: https://www.pfs-law.com/ Website: https://www.goldsteingrouppractice.com/ Website: https://nealtgoldstein.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/neal-t-goldstein-841aa652/ Show subscribe and platform links New episodes every week — subscribe so you never miss a conversation on the business of medicine. Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube Disclaimer This episode is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or medical advice.

19. mai 202626 min