In the executive suites of Los Angeles’ premier health systems, the conversation is shifting. For decades, physician recruitment was a line item tucked away in Human Resources. It was a department seen as a necessary expense rather than a revenue driver. But as the physician shortage deepens across Southern California and the nation, a new financial reality is setting in. An empty chair in a surgical suite or a darkened clinic office isn’t just a logistical headache. It is a hemorrhaging wound on the balance sheet.
In her new book, The Physician Recruitment Playbook, Tammy D. Hager, MBA, FABC, examines the true economics of healthcare staffing. Hager, a veteran of the industry with a background that bridges high-level business administration and clinical reality, argues that the cost of vacancy is an underestimated metric in healthcare leadership today.
Calculating the Unseen Loss
The book introduces a sobering formula for the modern CFO. Traditional accounting focuses on the cost of a recruiter’s salary or a job posting. Hager pivots the lens toward lost opportunity instead.
When a specialist position remains open for six months, the organization isn’t simply saving on a salary. It is losing significant downstream revenue. The book breaks these losses down in detail. A primary care physician might represent roughly $1.5 million in annual net revenue for a system, while a specialist such as an orthopedic surgeon or cardiologist can account for far more once labs, imaging, and hospital stays are factored in. Divided into a daily cost of vacancy, an open specialty role can weigh heavily on a facility’s finances every single day it stays unfilled.
Speed to Market Advantage
In the competitive LA market, speed is the ultimate currency. The author explains why the traditional post-and-pray approach to recruitment is a recipe for financial strain. The Physician Recruitment Playbook outlines a 48-hour emergency stabilization plan designed to limit these losses.
By using strategic locum tenens providers and streamlining the credentialing process, Hager shows leaders how to keep service lines open while they search for a permanent fit. The book argues that time-to-fill belongs on the list of key performance indicators reported directly to the board of directors. Cutting hiring time from six months to four changes more than the clinical team’s workload. It can meaningfully ease the financial pressure on a community hospital.
Beyond the Bottom Line
Hager is careful to note that the economics of recruitment aren’t purely financial. There is a human cost of vacancy that is equally dangerous. When a position stays vacant too long, the burden falls on the remaining staff. This creates what she calls the burnout death spiral. Existing physicians work longer hours, patient satisfaction scores slip, and eventually, more doctors resign, compounding the vacancy crisis.
Her answer is a rapid-response matrix, a system that helps leadership spot at-risk service lines before they collapse. By investing early in recruitment infrastructure, better technology, dedicated sourcing, and executive-level oversight, hospitals can work to avoid the steep costs of a mass exodus.
A New Executive Mandate
The message of The Physician Recruitment Playbook reads as a wake-up call for the C-suite. Hager argues that recruitment is no longer a clerical function. It is a sophisticated sales and marketing operation that deserves the same level of investment as a new hospital wing or a robotic surgery suite.
The Takeaway for Healthcare Leaders
For the modern healthcare executive, the book works less like a manual and more like an insurance policy. In an era where demand for care is rising, and the supply of providers is shrinking, leaders who take the cost of the empty chair seriously are far better positioned than those who ignore it.
The Physician Recruitment Playbook is positioned as a practical resource for healthcare administrators who want to turn their recruitment departments from cost centers into growth engines.











