"Doctors coin money when they do procedures but family medicine doesn't have any procedures"
About this Quote
The intent reads less like an attack on individual specialists and more like a diagnosis of incentives. In fee-for-service medicine, a colonoscopy, stent, or injection has a clean code, a measurable unit, a reimbursable “product.” Family medicine’s core work is messier: sorting vague symptoms, managing multiple chronic conditions, negotiating behavior change, catching cancer early because you noticed a small shift in a patient’s story. That’s labor, but it’s not legible to a billing system built like a vending machine.
The subtext is professional frustration and a warning. When you underpay primary care, you don’t just insult a field; you reshape the whole pipeline. Students chase higher-paying procedural specialties, primary care clinics thin out, access gets worse, and patients end up in ERs or specialist offices for issues that could’ve been handled upstream. Jones’s sentence works because it’s economically literal and morally charged at the same time: a quick jab that exposes how “value” gets defined when reimbursement becomes destiny.
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Jones, David. (2026, January 16). Doctors coin money when they do procedures but family medicine doesn't have any procedures. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/doctors-coin-money-when-they-do-procedures-but-121002/
Chicago Style
Jones, David. "Doctors coin money when they do procedures but family medicine doesn't have any procedures." FixQuotes. January 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/doctors-coin-money-when-they-do-procedures-but-121002/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Doctors coin money when they do procedures but family medicine doesn't have any procedures." FixQuotes, 16 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/doctors-coin-money-when-they-do-procedures-but-121002/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.



