Dr. Jay Proctor, MD
What this data tells you about Dr. Proctor
Dr. Jay Proctor is a family medicine in Beaumont, TX, with 20 years in practice. Based on federal Medicare data, Dr. Proctor performed 19,756 Medicare services across 14,313 unique beneficiaries.
Between the years covered by Open Payments, Dr. Proctor received a total of $6,315 from 52 pharmaceutical and/or device companies across 475 individual payments. These payments are legal, publicly disclosed under the federal Sunshine Act, and common in family medicine. 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. Proctor is Very High — reflecting how much public federal data is available about this provider. This is not a quality rating. Patients are encouraged to use this data as one of several factors when choosing a healthcare provider.
Medicare Practice Summary
Medicare Utilization ↗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 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Blood draw (venipuncture) | 1,359 | $8 | $25 |
| Comprehensive metabolic blood panel | 1,199 | $10 | $50 |
| Lipid panel (cholesterol and triglycerides) | 1,191 | $13 | $28 |
| Creatine kinase (cardiac enzyme) level, total | 1,191 | $6 | $15 |
| Complete blood count (CBC) with differential | 1,038 | $8 | $25 |
| Hemoglobin A1c test (diabetes monitoring) | 923 | $9 | $30 |
| Automated urinalysis | 817 | $2 | $30 |
| Thyroid hormone, t3 measurement, free | 786 | $16 | $60 |
| Free thyroxine (T4) test | 785 | $9 | $40 |
| Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) test | 782 | $16 | $81 |
| Vitamin B-12 level test | 748 | $15 | $50 |
| Urine microalbumin (protein) analysis | 726 | $6 | $15 |
| Magnesium level test | 672 | $6 | $15 |
| Uric acid level test | 670 | $4 | $20 |
| Vitamin D level test | 651 | $29 | $60 |
| Parathyroid hormone level test | 644 | $40 | $80 |
| Phosphate level test | 628 | $5 | $13 |
| Colorectal cancer screening; fecal occult blood test, immunoassay, 1-3 simultaneous | 427 | $18 | $50 |
| Testosterone (hormone) level, total | 356 | $25 | $55 |
| Prostate cancer screening; prostate specific antigen test (psa) | 330 | $19 | $84 |
| Ferritin level test (iron stores) | 308 | $13 | $28 |
| Transferrin (iron binding protein) level | 302 | $12 | $30 |
| Iron level test | 301 | $6 | $15 |
| Measurement of total estradiol (hormone) | 288 | $27 | $60 |
| Sex hormone binding globulin (protein) level | 279 | $21 | $45 |
| Office visit, established patient (30-39 min) | 174 | $68 | $200 |
| Testosterone (hormone) level, free | 150 | $24 | $75 |
| Annual wellness visit, follow-up | 140 | $122 | $175 |
| Folic acid level test | 129 | $14 | $35 |
| Ultrasound of both sides of head and neck blood flow | 119 | $76 | $275 |
| Echocardiogram, transthoracic | 102 | $63 | $700 |
| Steroid injection (triamcinolone) | 102 | $1 | $9 |
| PSA test (prostate cancer screening) | 97 | $18 | $84 |
| Urinalysis with microscopic exam | 94 | $3 | $33 |
| Drug screening test | 75 | $60 | $95 |
| Office visit, established patient (20-29 min) | 74 | $57 | $125 |
| Gonadotropin, follicle stimulating (reproductive hormone) level | 68 | $18 | $40 |
| Gonadotropin, luteinizing (reproductive hormone) level | 68 | $18 | $40 |
| Flu vaccine, quadrivalent | 65 | $71 | $84 |
| Flu vaccine administration | 64 | $27 | $36 |
| Basic metabolic blood panel | 60 | $8 | $40 |
| Glutamyltransferase (liver enzyme) level | 60 | $5 | $20 |
| Lactate dehydrogenase (enzyme) level | 58 | $4 | $15 |
| Injection, methylprednisolone acetate, 40 mg | 57 | $4 | $18 |
| Physician or allowed practitioner re-certification for medicare-covered home health services under a home health plan of care (patient not present), including contacts with home health agency and review of reports of patient status required by physicians a | 52 | $25 | $110 |
| Drug injection, under skin or into muscle | 48 | $8 | $40 |
| Initial preventive physical examination; face-to-face visit, services limited to new beneficiary during the first 12 months of medicare enrollment | 43 | $153 | $175 |
| Bilirubin level, direct | 41 | $2 | $15 |
| Chest X-ray, 2 views | 32 | $13 | $75 |
| Electrocardiogram (EKG), 12-lead | 31 | $7 | $75 |
| Pneumonia vaccine administration | 31 | $27 | $50 |
| Stool analysis for blood, by fecal hemoglobin determination by immunoassay | 28 | $16 | $50 |
| Ultrasound scan of head and neck soft tissue | 26 | $46 | $300 |
| Limited ultrasound scan behind abdominal cavity | 26 | $17 | $150 |
| Limited ultrasound scan of abdomen | 24 | $34 | $200 |
| Ultrasound study of arm and leg arteries | 23 | $40 | $250 |
| Physician or allowed practitioner certification for medicare-covered home health services under a home health plan of care (patient not present), including contacts with home health agency and review of reports of patient status required by physicians and | 23 | $39 | $125 |
| Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, 20 valent (pcv20), for intramuscular use | 20 | $254 | $325 |
| Complete ultrasound scan of abdomen | 19 | $45 | $150 |
| Cortisol (hormone) measurement, total | 19 | $9 | $40 |
| Test to measure expiratory airflow and volume | 17 | $14 | $75 |
| Annual wellness visit; includes a personalized prevention plan of service (pps), initial visit | 17 | $156 | $175 |
| Exercise or drug-induced heart stress test with electrocardiogram (ecg) with supervision by physician | 15 | $13 | $250 |
| Ultrasound of heart during rest, exercise and/or drug-induced stress with report | 15 | $63 | $500 |
| Ultrasound study of one arm or leg veins with compression and maneuvers | 14 | $69 | $250 |
| Red blood cell sedimentation rate, to detect inflammation, non-automated | 12 | $4 | $20 |
| Administration of vaccine | 12 | $10 | $30 |
| Pneumococcal vaccine, 23-valent | 11 | $131 | $150 |
Industry Payment Transparency
Open Payments through 2024 ↗Payment profile
Industry payments classified by relationship type. Not all payments are equal — research and consulting reflect different relationships than speaking programs or meals.
Payment trend by year
Annual totals from pharmaceutical and medical device companies.
Payments by company (2024)
Associated products mentioned in payments ›
Most payments (98%) are for meals and travel — low-value interactions that are common across virtually all practicing physicians. Total industry engagement is in the top 10% for family medicine in TX.
Geographic Context
2.5 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 measures how much public data is available about a provider — not how good they are. How we calculate this →
Summary
Dr. Proctor is a mixed practice specialist, with above-average Medicare volume (top 0% in TX), and high industry engagement (low-engagement, top 10%), with 20 years of practice experience.
This summary is auto-generated from federal data. It describes data availability and patterns — not clinical quality. Read our methodology →
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Dr. Proctor experienced with blood draw (venipuncture)?
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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. The Transparency Score measures 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.
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