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I think there are multiple factors explaining why the percentage of family physicians treating children declined again. Not the least of these is that pediatricians have a very limited scope of practice and need to market and attract patients, which they do quite a bit. There are even pediatric urgent care centers popping up all over the place now, some likely funded by venture capital just as other urgent care centers have been funded.
The loss of pediatric inpatient volume because of the effectiveness of vaccines that prevent many bacterial and viral illnesses means that fewer pediatric graduates are spending time in the hospital.
Family doctors used to retain their pediatric patients by delivering babies, seeing them in the newborn nursery, and beginning their relationship with the kids there. FPs are delivering fewer babies and the subsequent reduction in new kids in their practices has been a factor in this as well.
Finally, in multispecialty practices, pediatricians are employed there. Families immediately assume that their kids should be going to the pediatricians, not the family doctors. We need to keep talking up the fact that we take care of whole families to retain our pediatric practices.
Neil S. Calman, MD, is president and chief executive officer of the Institute for Family Health and is professor and chair of the Alfred and Gail Engelberg department of family medicine and community health at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and the Mount Sinai Health System, both in New York. Dr. Calman also serves on the editorial advisory board of Family Practice News.
I think there are multiple factors explaining why the percentage of family physicians treating children declined again. Not the least of these is that pediatricians have a very limited scope of practice and need to market and attract patients, which they do quite a bit. There are even pediatric urgent care centers popping up all over the place now, some likely funded by venture capital just as other urgent care centers have been funded.
The loss of pediatric inpatient volume because of the effectiveness of vaccines that prevent many bacterial and viral illnesses means that fewer pediatric graduates are spending time in the hospital.
Family doctors used to retain their pediatric patients by delivering babies, seeing them in the newborn nursery, and beginning their relationship with the kids there. FPs are delivering fewer babies and the subsequent reduction in new kids in their practices has been a factor in this as well.
Finally, in multispecialty practices, pediatricians are employed there. Families immediately assume that their kids should be going to the pediatricians, not the family doctors. We need to keep talking up the fact that we take care of whole families to retain our pediatric practices.
Neil S. Calman, MD, is president and chief executive officer of the Institute for Family Health and is professor and chair of the Alfred and Gail Engelberg department of family medicine and community health at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and the Mount Sinai Health System, both in New York. Dr. Calman also serves on the editorial advisory board of Family Practice News.
I think there are multiple factors explaining why the percentage of family physicians treating children declined again. Not the least of these is that pediatricians have a very limited scope of practice and need to market and attract patients, which they do quite a bit. There are even pediatric urgent care centers popping up all over the place now, some likely funded by venture capital just as other urgent care centers have been funded.
The loss of pediatric inpatient volume because of the effectiveness of vaccines that prevent many bacterial and viral illnesses means that fewer pediatric graduates are spending time in the hospital.
Family doctors used to retain their pediatric patients by delivering babies, seeing them in the newborn nursery, and beginning their relationship with the kids there. FPs are delivering fewer babies and the subsequent reduction in new kids in their practices has been a factor in this as well.
Finally, in multispecialty practices, pediatricians are employed there. Families immediately assume that their kids should be going to the pediatricians, not the family doctors. We need to keep talking up the fact that we take care of whole families to retain our pediatric practices.
Neil S. Calman, MD, is president and chief executive officer of the Institute for Family Health and is professor and chair of the Alfred and Gail Engelberg department of family medicine and community health at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and the Mount Sinai Health System, both in New York. Dr. Calman also serves on the editorial advisory board of Family Practice News.