Medicare Enrolled

Dr. Michael Segal, D.O.

Student in an Organized Health Care Education/Training Program · Newark, NJ
Practice pattern: Interventional Cardiology — Practice focused on catheter-based cardiac procedures
Low-engagement
201 LYONS AVE, Newark, NJ 07112
8008432384
In practice since 2016 (10 years)
NPI: 1508213273 verify on NPPES ↗
Very High
DATA COVERAGE
Data in 4 of 4 federal sources
Measures public federal data availability — not provider quality
Informational, not a quality rating. This page presents federal public records about Dr. Segal from CMS (NPPES, Open Payments, Medicare Provider Utilization, PECOS). It is not medical advice, an endorsement, or a judgment of clinical quality. Always consult the provider directly and a licensed clinician for medical decisions. Read methodology →
Are you Dr. Segal? Request a correction or review of any data shown here. Provider portal →

What this data tells you about Dr. Segal

Dr. Michael Segal is a student in an organized health care education/training program specialist in Newark, NJ, with 10 years of NPI registration. Based on federal Medicare data, Dr. Segal performed 87 Medicare services across 87 unique beneficiaries.

Between the years covered by Open Payments, Dr. Segal received a total of $6,573 from 9 pharmaceutical and/or device companies across 153 individual payments. These payments are legal, publicly disclosed under the federal Sunshine Act, and common in student in an organized health care education/training program. Most payments are for meals and travel — low-value interactions common across virtually all practicing physicians. Patients may wish to discuss these relationships with their provider.

The Data Coverage level for Dr. Segal is Very High — reflecting how much public federal data is available about this provider. Patients are encouraged to use this data as one of several factors when choosing a healthcare provider.

✓ 10 years in practice ▲ 87 Medicare services $6,573 industry payments

Medicare Practice Summary

Medicare Utilization ↗
87
Medicare services
Bottom 16% in NJ for student in an organized health care education/training program
Lower Medicare volume may reflect subspecialty focus, hospital-based work, or a higher share of non-Medicare patients.
87
Unique beneficiaries
$99
Avg. Medicare payment
Medicare patients only (65+ / disabled) · How to read this →
~9 Medicare services per year of practice

Top procedures by volume

Ranked by number of services performed for Medicare patients. Avg. submitted charge is what the provider billed; avg. Medicare payment is what CMS paid.

Procedure Volume Avg. paid Avg. submitted
Fluoroscopic guidance for central vein access device
Use of live X-ray imaging to guide the placement or removal of a central vein access device.
23 $17 $70
Insertion of tunneled central venous catheter for infusion, age 5+
A surgical procedure to place a long-term catheter into a large vein for delivering medications or fluids. The catheter is tunneled under the skin to reduce infection risk and provide stable access for patients aged 5 and older.
18 $239 $3,139
Hospital follow-up visit, moderate complexity
Follow-up hospital visit for an existing patient involving moderate medical decision making. The visit requires at least 35 minutes of time spent on the date of service.
18 $72 $273
Initial hospital admission, low complexity
Initial hospital inpatient or observation care for a new patient involving straightforward or low-level medical decision making, with at least 40 minutes total time on the date of the encounter.
17 $78 $392
Initial hospital admission, moderate complexity
Initial hospital inpatient or observation care for a new patient involving moderate-level medical decision making, with at least 55 minutes total time on the date of the encounter.
11 $120 $522
How to read this data: This reflects Medicare patients only (typically 65+). Payment amounts are what Medicare paid the provider, not your out-of-pocket cost. A higher procedure volume generally indicates more experience with that procedure.
20.7% high complexity
0.0% medium
79.3% routine

Industry Payment Transparency

Open Payments through 2024 ↗
$6,573
Total received (2023-2024)
Avg $3,286/year across 2 years
Top 5% in NJ for student in an organized health care education/training program
A higher payment rank reflects disclosed industry relationships (consulting, research, speaking) common among subspecialists — not wrongdoing.
9
Companies
153
Individual payments
All payments are legal and publicly reported · Not evidence of wrongdoing · How to interpret →

Payment profile

Industry payments classified by relationship type. Not all payments are equal — research and consulting reflect different relationships than speaking programs or meals.

Meals & Travel
Food, beverages, travel, and lodging — typically low-value
$6,573 (100.0%)

Payment trend by year

Annual totals from pharmaceutical and medical device companies.

2024
$4,820
2023
$1,752

Payments by company (2024)

Consulting
Speaking
Meals & Travel
Research
Medtronic, Inc.
$3,331
Inari Medical, Inc.
$782
Abbott Laboratories
$442
ShockWave Medical, Inc
$94
Cagent Vascular INC
$86
Baxter Healthcare
$85
Top 3 companies account for 94.5% of 2024 payments
All-time payments by company (2023-2024) ›
Medtronic, Inc.
$4,353
Inari Medical, Inc.
$1,053
Abbott Laboratories
$468
Silk Road Medical, Inc.
$174
Cagent Vascular INC
$138
W. L. Gore & Associates, Inc.
$108
Cook Medical LLC
$100
ShockWave Medical, Inc
$94
Baxter Healthcare
$85
Top 3 companies account for 89.4% of all-time payments
Associated products mentioned in payments ›
ABRE · CHOCOLATE PTA BALLOON CATHETER · CONCERTOTM · CT THROMBECTOMY SYSTEM KIT · DIAMONDBACK PERIPHERAL · ENDURANT IIS · ENROUTE Transcarotid Neuroprotection System · ENTEER · ESPRIT · FLOWTRIEVER CATHETER · HAWKONE · IN.PACT ADMIRAL · IN.PACT AV · JETI ALL IN ONE NON-STERILE KIT · JETI PERIPHERAL CATHETER · MVP · PREVELEAK · S · Serrantor · Shockwave IVL System with the Shockwave C2 Coronary IVL Catheter · VALIANT CAPTIVIA · VIABAHN Endoprosthesis with PROPATEN Bioactive Surface · ZENITH
Should you be concerned? Payments from pharmaceutical and device companies are legal and common — 57% of U.S. physicians receive at least one. They often reflect legitimate consulting, research, or education. What matters is whether a recommended drug or device appears in your doctor's payment records. If so, consider asking your doctor about it. How to interpret this data →

Most payments (100%) are for meals and travel — low-value interactions that are common across virtually all practicing physicians. Total industry engagement is in the top 5% for student in an organized health care education/training program in NJ.

Looking for a student in an organized health care education/training program specialist in Newark?
Compare student in an organized health care education/training programs in the Newark area by procedure volume, costs, and industry payment transparency.
Browse student in an organized health care education/training programs nearby

Geographic Context

Student in an organized health care education/training programs within 10 mi
32,155
Per 100K population
3764.6
County median income
$76,712
Nearest hospital
NEWARK BETH ISRAEL MEDICAL CENTER
0.0 mi

Data Sources

Provider Registry NPPES Weekly updates
Medicare Enrollment PECOS Monthly updates
Practice Data Medicare Util. Annual (CY lag)
Industry Payments Open Payments CY 2024
Disciplinary History — Not public N/A

This provider has data in 4 of 4 available federal datasets, with a Data Coverage level of Very High. This reflects how much public data is available about a provider. How we calculate this →

Summary

Dr. Segal is an interventional cardiology specialist, with moderate Medicare volume, with low-engagement industry engagement in the top 5% of NJ peers.

This summary is auto-generated from federal data, describing data availability and patterns. Read our methodology →

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Dr. Segal experienced with fluoroscopic guidance for central vein access device?
Based on Medicare claims data, Dr. Segal performed 23 fluoroscopic guidance for central vein access device services. Research suggests that higher procedure volume is often associated with better outcomes, particularly for complex procedures. Note that Medicare data only captures patients aged 65 and older, so the total practice volume across all patients is likely higher.
Does Dr. Segal receive payments from pharmaceutical companies?
Yes. Dr. Segal received a total of $6,573 from 9 companies across 153 individual payments. These payments are legal, publicly disclosed under the federal Sunshine Act, and common among physicians — 57% of all U.S. physicians receive at least one industry payment. Patients may wish to ask their doctor about these relationships, especially if a recommended drug or device appears in the payment records.
How do Dr. Segal's costs compare to other student in an organized health care education/training programs in Newark?
Dr. Segal's average Medicare payment per service is $99. Note that these figures represent what Medicare pays, not your out-of-pocket cost, which depends on your specific insurance plan and deductible. Procedure-level data above shows both what was submitted and what Medicare paid for each service type.
What does Data Coverage mean?
Data Coverage (currently Very High for Dr. Segal) measures how much public federal data is available about a provider. It is not a quality rating. A "Very High" or "High" level means the provider has data across multiple federal sources (NPPES, PECOS, Medicare Utilization, Open Payments), indicating a long track record of practice, Medicare participation, and industry disclosure. A "Low" or "Moderate" level may simply mean the provider is newer, does not see Medicare patients, or has not received any industry payments — none of which are inherently negative. Read our full methodology →
Is this data up to date?
Each data source has its own update cycle. Provider registry data (NPPES) is updated weekly. Medicare enrollment (PECOS) is updated monthly. Medicare practice data has a ~2 year lag — the most recent available is typically 2 years prior. Industry payment data (Open Payments) is published annually, usually in June, covering the prior calendar year. We display the data date prominently on each section so you always know how current it is. See our data freshness policy →
About this page

All data on this page is sourced verbatim from public federal records published by the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS): NPPES ↗, Open Payments ↗, Medicare Provider Utilization ↗, and PECOS. Publication is mandated by the Physician Payments Sunshine Act (§6002 ACA, 42 U.S.C. §1320a-7h) and the Freedom of Information Act.

This page is not medical advice, an endorsement, a recommendation, or a quality rating. Data Coverage reflects data completeness — how much federal information exists for this provider — not clinical performance, patient outcomes, or quality of care. Always verify information directly with the provider and consult a licensed clinician before making medical decisions.

Provider corrections: Provider portal · Privacy questions: Privacy Policy · Terms: Terms of Use · Methodology: Methodology

Data Disclaimer — Data sourced from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS): National Plan and Provider Enumeration System (NPPES), Open Payments program, Medicare Provider Utilization and Payment Data, and Provider Enrollment & Certification data (PECOS). Published under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). This website is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or authorized by CMS, HHS, or the U.S. Government. Data may contain errors as reported to CMS by providers and reporting entities. Payments from industry are legal and do not indicate wrongdoing. Medicare data reflects only patients aged 65+ or those with qualifying disabilities. For corrections, contact CMS directly. This information does not constitute medical advice and should not be used as the sole basis for choosing a healthcare provider. Procedure descriptions use plain language and do not reference CPT® codes, which are copyrighted by the American Medical Association. Full methodology → · Report a data error → · Privacy policy →