Complete Endoscopy Care

Your practice. Your schedule. GI procedures for doctors who want to run their own practice with flexibility.

You bring a license and a small business. We bring hospital contracts, a pre-built care team, and credentialing infrastructure. You decide how much you work, where, and how often. Earn equity where you practice.

GI proceduralist and nurse in endoscopy suite
What this is

A physician-owned platform for independent GI proceduralists.

We’re a managed service line for rural and community hospitals that can’t fill their endoscopy block. We hold the hospital contracts and run the wraparound care team. The procedures themselves are done by independent GI doctors who run their own practices and contract with us for hospital access on terms that work for their lives.

No W2. No production targets. You’re a small business and so are we — we do business together. And as you participate, you accrue ownership in the regional practice itself, alongside the other physicians who deliver care through the network.

You went into medicine to take care of patients, not to take orders. We make solo practice viable without the build-out.
The relationship

Two small businesses. One contract.

You handle what you handle when you’re a private-practice physician anywhere. We handle the parts of solo practice that take years and capital to build on your own.

You bring

The license, the entity, and the procedural skill.

  • An active medical license in any state you want to work in. We help with reciprocity and IMLC where it applies.
  • Your own business entity — PLLC, S-corp, or sole proprietorship. We pay your entity (1099); you handle taxes and retirement.
  • Board certification in gastroenterology and current procedural privileges from a recent role.
  • Choice on malpractice. Carry your own occurrence policy, or use ours under the contract. Both work.
  • Your own retirement, health insurance, and CME budget — on your own terms, deducted as business expenses.
We provide

The infrastructure that makes solo practice work at hospital scale.

  • Pre-credentialed access to a network of rural and community hospitals. Adding a new hospital is paperwork hours, not months.
  • A real care team — intake, prep coaching, pathology delivery, PCP letters, day-after follow-up, surveillance scheduling. Already running when you arrive.
  • Scheduling and block coordination. You see prepped patients on time. You don’t chase referrals or backfill cancellations.
  • Multi-state license maintenance support and DEA/controlled-substance regulatory tracking.
  • Travel and lodging when you’re flying in. Same hotel, same route, every visit.
  • Hospital-side billing. Hospital handles the patient billing. You bill CEC for the contract value of your agreed scope — paid monthly, as installments of the contract.
Autonomy

Work as much or as little as you want.

One week a month is fine. Full time is fine. Doing this on the side of an employed role for a year while you transition is fine. We don’t care, and the hospitals don’t care, as long as the block is covered consistently.

Light

One week a month.

Take one block a month. Useful if you’re semi-retired, transitioning, or running this on the side of another role.

~36 procedure days/yr
Moderate

Two to three weeks a month.

Comparable to a part-time employed schedule on cash, with substantially better flexibility and lower overhead.

~72–108 procedure days/yr
Full

Four weeks a month.

~36–38 working weeks per year — Cash well exceeds MGMA median GI; Unprecedented quality of life.

~144 procedure days/yr
How many hospitals you cover is a separate question from how many weeks you work. You might cover the same hospital two or three weeks a month if it has the volume. You might rotate across two, three, or four hospitals to get the geography or case mix you want. Or you might cover one block a month at one hospital and not pick up anywhere else. We work with you on what’s available in your region and what fits your life — not a fixed template.

You can ramp up or ramp down between rotations. Drop a hospital. Add one. Take three months off if your kid is graduating or you want to travel. As long as you give the network advance notice so coverage stays continuous, we’ll work it out.

Geography

Drive in, or fly in. Pick what fits your life.

Rural endoscopy doesn’t require living somewhere remote. Two coverage models work, and you can mix them.

Regional drive-in

If you live in or around the Mid-Atlantic, parts of New England, or the Carolinas, several of our hospital sites are inside a 1–3 hour drive of where you already are. Drive in, do your block, come home that night or stay locally for the 3 procedure days.

  • Sleep at home most nights
  • Mileage and per diem reimbursed
  • Good fit for docs with school-age kids or a partner who can’t relocate
  • Most flexible to ramp up and down

Fly-in week

If you live further from the network, fly in for the work week. Standard visit is one fly-in day, three procedure days, one fly-out day. Same hotel, same route, every month, on a route you helped pick.

  • Flights, hotel, and per diem covered
  • Direct routes prioritized; extended-stay hotel relationships
  • Good fit for any region in the network
  • Predictable, batch-able work weeks

Plenty of doctors mix the two: drive to the hospital that’s ninety minutes away one week and fly to the one in West Virginia the next. We work the rotation around what you want, not the other way around.

Infrastructure included

Patients are prepped, scheduled, and followed up. By a team you don’t manage.

In a traditional private practice you would have to hire and train this team yourself. Here it’s already running. You walk into a procedure suite where every patient is eligible, prepped, and on time, and you walk out without a follow-up phone tree to maintain.

Intake & eligibilityFaxed and direct-access referrals are parsed for indication, anticoag status, ASA class, and prior pathology. Care navigator triages within hours.
Multi-touch prep coachingSMS sequence Day −14 to morning of, branched by language and prep type. Catches non-compliance before the day-of.
Day-of orchestrationConfirmations, no-show prediction, same-day waitlist backfill. Slots stay full.
Pathology and PCP lettersPath arrives, drafts go out for sign-off, summaries go to the patient and a structured letter to the PCP.
Day +1 and +5–7 follow-upAutomated check-ins; only the patients who need clinical attention get escalated.
Surveillance schedulingUSMSTF / AGA / ACG rules engine schedules the right interval. The patient comes back to you.
Show up. Do procedures. Sign your notes. Go home.
How the business works

You run a real business. We make it administratively simple.

If you’ve never operated a PLLC or S-corp before, your accountant can set one up in a week. The benefits compound: every business expense (CME, equipment, mileage, home office) is deductible, you control your retirement contribution ceiling (Solo 401(k) up to ~$70K/yr), and you decide your own salary vs. distribution mix.

Your entity
PLLC or S-corp in your state of residence. Most physicians who do this set up an S-corp for the payroll-tax advantages. You own 100% of it.
How you get paid
Each contract you sign with CEC defines an agreed scope at a hospital and the contract value. Compensation is paid monthly to your business account as installments of the contract — not per-procedure billing. Rates are transparent and consistent across the network.
Taxes
Quarterly estimated taxes paid by your entity. Your accountant handles it. Standard 1099 contractor structure — no W2 withholding, no pay-stub games.
Retirement
Solo 401(k) or SEP-IRA through your entity. Up to ~$70K/yr in tax-advantaged contributions, far above any employed-physician 401(k) match.
Health insurance
Buy your own policy through ACA marketplace, your spouse’s employer, or a private group plan. Premium is deductible to the entity.
Malpractice
Your choice. Carry your own occurrence policy (deductible business expense, multi-state coverage) or use the CEC umbrella under the contract. We’ll talk through both based on your situation.
Business expenses
CME, conferences, equipment, journals, home office, vehicle mileage to local sites, professional development. Deductible to the entity. Standard small-business stuff your accountant lives for.

Net result: for the same gross income, an independent contractor with a properly-structured S-corp typically takes home 8–15% more than an employed W2 physician after taxes and retirement optimization. We’re not your accountant — talk to one — but the math is well-documented in the physician-finance community.

And: equity in the practice you work in.

Each contract you hold with CEC accrues shares in the state-level Professional Corporation — the physician-owned practice entity that holds clinical privileges across the network. This is on top of your contract compensation, not in place of it. The economics are recurring partnership distributions, not a one-time exit payout. A physician group practice, in other words — just one that doesn’t require you to build the rest of it.

How shares accrue
Granted on a quarterly cadence while your contract is active, scaled to your contract scope. A doc with a 4 week/month contract receives a proportionally larger grant each quarter than one with a 1 week/month contract. Per-share grant rates and current PC valuation walked through individually before any contract signing.
Vesting
Two-year vest with a one-year cliff. Stop participating and unvested shares lapse; vested shares stay yours.
What it pays
Annual distributions of PC profit, pro-rata to your vested share count. Recurring year over year — this is partnership economics, not lottery-ticket equity.
Voting
Yes — you vote on practice governance: clinical scope, hospital onboarding, care-team protocols, practice norms. Single class of voting shares; one share, one vote.
Who’s on the cap table
100% participating physicians. No outside investors, no PE, no MSO equity holders. Your stake dilutes proportionally as new docs join, but the entire pool stays physician-owned by definition.
State structure
A separate PC per state where the network operates — standardized so it works the same way across the country. You hold shares in the PC(s) for the states where you actually deliver procedures.
Exit / buy-back
On retirement, voluntary departure, or sustained inactivity, vested shares are repurchased at fair value per a formula in the shareholder agreement. Walked through individually.

Specifics on share count per contract scope, current valuation, and buy-back formula are handled in individual conversations as part of finalizing your contract. We’re describing the structure here, not committing to a number on a webpage.

Side by side

How this is different from employed and locum.

If you’re reading this page, you’re probably weighing this against a hospital W2 role or a locum agency contract. Here’s the comparison, dimension by dimension.

Dimension Employed (W2) Locum agency Complete Endoscopy Care
Employment structure W2 employee of the hospital 1099 contractor through agency 1099 to your own PLLC / S-corp
Who sets your schedule Hospital admin Agency picks placements You do
Geography Wherever you’re hired Wherever the agency sends you Drive-in or fly-in network — you pick
Patient continuity Yes, your panel No — revolving door, every 4–8 weeks Yes — same hospital, same block
Pre-procedure clinic visits Required Sometimes None — telehealth or APP
Call obligation Often required Sometimes negotiated None
RVU / productivity targets Yes No (day rate) No (day rate)
Documentation burden Full EHR documentation, HEDIS measures, etc. Lighter, varies Procedure note only
Care team for intake, prep, path, follow-up Hospital-dependent — often understaffed None — you’re on your own Built and running — same team every visit
Pre-credentialing One site (your employer) 30–120 days each new placement Once — maintained for you across the network
Time from yes to first procedure 6–12 month recruitment + start date 30–120 days credentialing each cycle 4–8 weeks per hospital, then permanent
Retirement contribution ceiling ~$23K (W2 401(k) + match) Limited — depends on your setup Up to ~$70K (Solo 401(k) through your S-corp)
Business expense deductions No (W2) Limited Yes — CME, mileage, equipment, home office
Markup taken from your bill rate N/A ~30% to the agency None — direct contract
Time-off & sabbatical flexibility Set PTO, often capped Between placements only You set it — ramp up or down between rotations
Equity in the practice you work in No No Yes — PC shares accrue while under contract, recurring annual distributions, physician-owned cap table

The honest summary: you leave the things that make employed GI unattractive (admin, RVU pressure, EHR theater) and the things that make locums GI unattractive (no continuity, agency markup, credentialing churn). This model is structured to remove both.

Who this works for

A few real situations this fits.

We don’t have a target persona. We have a model that flexes to match a few different career stages. If something below sounds like you, the model probably works.

Mid-career

You’re ten years out and burned out on RVU bingo.

You like procedures and dislike clinic. You’ve thought about going independent but the practice-build math is daunting. You want a real schedule and the financial upside of contractor status without the years of overhead.

Likely scope: 2–3 weeks/month, drive-in or fly-in regional
Semi-retired

You sold or wound down your practice and miss procedural work.

You don’t need full-time income. You’d like to do procedures one week a month, see continuity patients, and stop existing in airports. Drive-in to a hospital within a couple hours of home is ideal.

Likely scope: 1 week/month, drive-in regional
Parent / caregiver

You can’t do hospital W2 schedules anymore.

School pickups, an aging parent, a partner with a non-portable career. Locum churn doesn’t work because it’s unpredictable; employed doesn’t work because the hours don’t bend. You want the same hospital block on the same week each month, near home.

Likely scope: 1–2 weeks/month, drive-in regional
Transitioning

You’re leaving an employed role and want a soft landing.

You’ve given notice or are about to. You don’t want to jump to another W2 immediately and you don’t want to start a practice from scratch. You want predictable contractor income while you figure out what’s next.

Likely scope: ramp up over 6–12 months, any geography
Side practice

You’re still employed but want to build something on the side.

Your employer is fine with your moonlighting (or you’re negotiating it). You want to build up an independent practice that lives in parallel for a year or two before you make a full transition.

Likely scope: 1 week/month, evenings/weekends not applicable
Coastal & rural

You live somewhere desirable and want to keep living there.

Your home is in the Mid-Atlantic, in a town you don’t want to leave. The local hospital can’t fill GI. We can probably make that hospital one of your network sites and let you walk to work.

Likely scope: any, drive-in only
Practical questions

FAQ.

Do I need to have an LLC or S-corp set up before we talk?

No. About half the people we talk to set theirs up after the conversation. Your accountant can do it in a week. Set-up cost is typically $300–800. We can recommend a few physician-friendly accountants if helpful.

How does pay actually work?

Each contract you sign with CEC has an agreed scope at a hospital and the corresponding contract value. You’re paid the contract value in monthly installments to your business account — not per-procedure billing. Rates are transparent and consistent across the network; specifics walked through individually because they vary slightly by hospital scope and your malpractice election. Lifetime economics are competitive with mid-tier locum coverage without the agency markup, and the cash flow is far more predictable than per-block billing.

Can I work this on the side of an employed role for a year while I transition?

Yes, if your employment contract allows it (most do, with some restrictions). We’ll review your non-compete and moonlighting clauses before you commit. Many people start at 1 week/month while still employed, ramp to 2 weeks/month after 6–12 months, and either stay there or transition fully.

What if I want to drop coverage for three months for a sabbatical or family thing?

Fine. We need advance notice so the hospital block is covered by another doc in the network. As long as the schedule lock-in is respected, you can take meaningful breaks. This is one of the actual differences between this model and an employed role — nobody’s “FMLA-ing” you.

How is this different from a locum agency?

Three things. First, no agency markup — we’re not selling your time to the hospital, we have our own contracts. Second, you’re back at the same hospital every cycle, so patients see you. Third, the care team handles the wraparound work that locums don’t do, which is the only reason this is a viable service line for the hospitals in the first place.

What about my non-compete?

We’ll review it. Most employed-GI non-competes have geographic radii that don’t cover rural hospitals 60+ miles outside metro areas. If yours does, we’ll talk through whether to wait it out or work in a different region first.

Who carries malpractice?

Your choice. Many physicians prefer to carry their own occurrence policy — deductible as a business expense, portable, multi-state coverage. Others prefer to use the CEC umbrella (factored into the contract rate). We talk through both based on your existing coverage and tail situation.

Can I add or drop hospitals from my rotation later?

Yes, with notice. You might start at one hospital, like the model, and add a second the following quarter. Or decide a particular hospital’s a bad fit and swap it. Schedule changes are coordinated against the next rotation cycle so coverage is continuous.

Is there any call?

None. The contracted scope is procedural endoscopy at scheduled blocks. ER consults, inpatient consults, GI bleeders — not in scope. The hospital handles its own emergencies through whatever existing coverage they had before us.

What if I want more than 3 procedure days a week at a given hospital?

Modular up to 5 days/week. A 4-day or 5-day contract typically gets a higher fee from the hospital and proportional rate to you. Scope is negotiated per-hospital based on volume.

What hospitals are in the network now?

The network is being built — we’re in active conversation with rural and community hospitals across the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast. We’re happy to walk through the current pipeline and which hospitals are closest to your geography.

How does the equity actually work?

Each contract you hold with CEC accrues shares in the state-level PC — the physician-owned practice entity. Shares are granted quarterly while the contract is active, scaled to contract scope. Two-year vest with a one-year cliff. The PC distributes its annual profit to shareholders pro-rata to vested shares, year over year. 100% of PC equity is held by participating physicians; no outside investors on this cap table. As more docs join, your stake dilutes proportionally, but the pool stays physician-owned by definition. Per-share grant rate per contract scope, current PC valuation, and buy-back terms are walked through individually before any contract signing — we’re not committing to specific numbers on a webpage.

Is the equity in the operating company or the practice?

The practice. CEC has two entities: the PC (Professional Corporation) which is the physician-owned clinical practice, and the MSO (Management Services Organization) which is the non-clinical operating company — platform, care team, hospital contracts, investor capital. Participating physicians earn shares in the PC, not the MSO. This keeps physicians on a clean physician-only cap table and aligns governance over clinical decisions with the people doing clinical work. The MSO is run separately by the operating-company founders.

How is CEC structured? Are you PE-backed?

We’re an independent, founder-led operating company — not a PE roll-up. We don’t buy practices and we don’t replace docs with mid-levels. The model is a managed service line with a per-contract economic structure (similar in shape to managed anesthesia or managed hospitalist programs). The PC, where physicians hold equity, is structurally separate from the MSO and stays physician-owned. Happy to walk through both cap tables in a conversation if that’s relevant to you.

If this sounds like the practice you wish you had, let’s talk through what it could look like for you.

No application portal. No HR. Send an email and we’ll set up a 30-minute call — cover what regions are active, what your scope and geography preferences are, and what the math works out to in your situation. If it’s a fit, we keep talking. If it’s not, you’ve learned something useful about an emerging model.

Send an email More questions first