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Hospitalists trained in family medicine

Lori J. Heim, MD, FAAFP, a hospitalist in practice at Scotland Memorial Hospital in Laurinburg, N.C., for the past 10 years, recalls when she first decided to pursue hospital medicine as a career. As a family physician in private practice who admitted patients to the local hospital in Pinehurst, N.C., and even followed them into the ICU, she needed a more flexible schedule when she became president-elect of the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP).

Dr. Lori J. Heim

“My local hospital told me they had a policy against hiring family physicians as hospitalists. They didn’t consider us qualified,” Dr. Heim said. “I was incredulous when I first heard that because I already had full admitting privileges at the hospital. It made no sense, since they allowed me to manage my patients in the ICU.”

Then an opportunity opened at Scotland Memorial, located an hour away. “That has been a fabulous experience for me,” she said. The transition was relatively easy, following more than 2 decades of office practice. Dr. Heim’s hospitalist group now includes eight full-time clinicians who have a mix of family medicine and internal medicine backgrounds.

“I’ve never felt anything other than collegial support here. We go to the ER to evaluate patients and decide whether to admit them, and we do a lot of medical procedures. I’m not practicing pediatrics currently, but I have no problem conducting a gynecological exam. I think my experience in family medicine and primary care has been an asset,” Dr. Heim said. “I’m not sure I would be a hospitalist today if I had not been elected president of AAFP, but it was fortuitous.”

Respect for HTFMs is growing

Hospitalists trained in family medicine (HTFM) are a small but important segment of this field and of the membership of the Society of Hospital Medicine. The board specialties of physicians who work in the hospital are not always broken out in existing databases, but HTFMs are believed to represent about 8% of SHM members, and somewhere around 10%-15% of the total hospitalist workforce. According to SHM’s 2018 State of Hospital Medicine Report, 65% of hospital medicine groups employed at least one family medicine–trained provider in their group.1

SHM’s Special Interest Group (SIG) for HTFMs reports to the society’s Board of Directors. The American Academy of Family Medicine, with 131,400 members, also has a Member Interest Group (MIG) for HTFMs. When AAFP recently surveyed its members to identify their primary patient care practice location, only 4% named the hospital (not including the emergency department), while 3% said the hospital emergency department.2

Among 32,450 adult primary care-trained hospitalists surveyed for the June 2016 AAMC In Brief of the American Association of Medical Colleges, 81.9% of the hospitalists identified internal medicine as their specialty, while 5.2% identified themselves as family physicians.3 A 2014 Medical Group Management Association survey, which reported data for 4,200 hospitalists working in community hospitals, found that 82% were internal medicine trained, versus 10% in family medicine and 7% in pediatrics.

Family medicine hospitalists may be more common in rural areas or in small hospitals – where a clinician is often expected to wear more hats, said hospitalist David Goldstein, MD, FHM, assistant director of the family medicine residency program at Natividad Medical Center, Salinas, Calif., and cochair of SHM’s family medicine SIG. “In a smaller hospital, if there’s not sufficient volume to support full-time pediatric and adult hospital medicine services, a family medicine hospitalist might do both – and even help staff the ICU.”

A decade or so ago, much of the professional literature about the role of HTFMs suggested that some had experienced a lack of respect or of equal job opportunities, while others faced pay differentials.3-5 Since then, the field of hospital medicine has come a long way toward recognizing their contributions, although there are still hurdles to overcome, mainly involving issues of credentialing, to allow HTFMs to play equal roles in the hospital, the ICU, or in residency training. The SHM 2018 State of Hospital Medicine Report reveals that HTFMs actually made slightly higher salaries on average than their internist colleagues, $301,833 versus $300,030.

Dr. Claudia Geyer

Prior to the advent of hospital medicine, both family medicine and internal medicine physicians practiced in much the same way in their medical offices, and visited their patients in the hospital, said Claudia Geyer, MD, SFHM, system chief of hospital medicine at Central Maine Healthcare in Lewiston. She is trained and boarded in both family and internal medicine. “When hospital medicine launched, its heavy academic emphasis on internists led to underrecognition of the continued contributions of family medicine. Family physicians never left the hospital setting and – in certain locales – were the predominant hospitalists. We just waited for the recognition to catch up with the reality,” Dr. Geyer said.

“I don’t feel family medicine for hospitalists is nearly the stepchild of internal medicine that it was when I first started,” Dr. Heim said. “In my multihospital hospitalist group, I haven’t seen anything to suggest that they treat family medicine hospitalists as second class.” The demand for hospitalists is greater than internists can fill, while clearly the public is not concerned about these distinctions, she said.

Whether clinicians are board certified in family medicine or internal medicine may be less important to their skills for practicing in the hospital than which residency program they completed, what emphasis it placed on working in the hospital or ICU, electives completed, and other past experience. “Some family medicine residencies offer more or less hospital experience,” Dr. Heim said.

Dr. Jasen Gundersen

Jasen Gundersen, MD, MBA, CPE, SFHM, president of acute and post-acute services for the national hospital services company TeamHealth, agreed that there has been dramatic improvement in the status of HTFMs. He is one, and still practices as a hospitalist at Boca Raton (Fla.) Regional Hospital when administrative responsibilities permit.

TeamHealth has long been open to family medicine doctors, Dr. Gundersen added, although some of the medical staff at hospitals that contract with TeamHealth have issues with it. “We will talk to them about it,” he said. “We hire hospitalists who can do the work, and we evaluate them based on their background and skill set, where they’ve practiced and for how long. We want people who are experienced and good at managing hospitalized patients. For new residency grads, we look at their electives and the focus of their training.”

 

 

What is home for HTFMs?

Where are HTFMs most likely to find their professional home? “That’s hard to answer,” said Patricia Seymour, MD, FHM, FAAFP, an academic hospitalist at the University of Massachusetts-Worcester. “In the last 4-5 years, SHM has worked very hard to create a space for HTFMs. AAFP has a hospital medicine track at their annual meeting, and that’s a good thing. But they also need to protect family physicians’ right to practice in any setting they choose. For those pursuing hospital medicine, there’s a different career trajectory, different CME needs, and different recertification needs.”

Dr. Patricia Seymour

Dr. Seymour is the executive cochair of SHM’s family medicine SIG and serves as interim chief of a family medicine hospitalist group that provides inpatient training for a family practice residency, where up to a third of the 12 residents each year go on to pursue hospital medicine as a career. “We have the second-oldest family medicine–specific hospitalist group in the country, so our residency training has an emphasis on hospital medicine,” she explained.

“Because I’m a practicing hospitalist, the residents come to me seeking advice. I appreciate the training I received as a family physician in communication science, palliative care, geriatrics, family systems theory, and public health. I wouldn’t have done it any other way, and that’s how I counsel our students and residents,” she said. Others suggest that the generalist training and diverse experiences of family medicine can be a gift for a doctor who later chooses hospital medicine.

AAFP is a large umbrella organization and the majority of its members practice primary care, Dr. Heim said. “I don’t know the percentage of HTFMs who are members of AAFP. Some no doubt belong to both AAFP and SHM.” Even though both groups have recognized this important subset of their members who chose the field of hospital medicine and its status as a career track, it can be a stretch for family medicine to embrace hospitalists.

“It inherently goes against our training, which is to work in outpatient, inpatient, obstetric, pediatric, and adult settings,” Dr. Heim said. “It’s difficult to reconcile giving up a big part of what defined your training – that range of settings. I remember feeling like I should apologize to other family medicine doctors for choosing this path.”

Credentialing opportunities and barriers

For the diverse group of practicing HTFMs, credentialing and scope of practice represent their biggest current issues. A designation of Focused Practice in Hospital Medicine (FPHM) has been offered jointly since 2010 by the American Board of Family Medicine (ABFM) and the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM), although their specific requirements vary.

Eligible hospitalist candidates for the focused practice exam must have an unrestricted medical license, maintenance of current primary certification, and verification of three years of unsupervised hospital medicine practice experience. ABIM views FPHM not as a subspecialty, but as a variation of internal medicine certification, identifying diplomates who are board-certified in internal medicine with a hospital medicine specialization. They do not have to take the general internal medicine recertification exam if they qualify for FPHM.

ABFM-certified family physicians who work primarily in a hospital setting can take the same test for FPHM, with the same eligibility requirements. But ABFM does not consider focused practice a subspecialty, or the Certificate of Added Qualifications in Family Medicine as sufficient for board certification. That means family physicians also need to take its general board exam in order to maintain their ABFM board certification.

ABFM’s decision not to accept the focused practice designation as sufficient for boarding was disappointing to a lot of hospitalists, said Laura “Nell” Hodo, MD, FAAFP, chair of AAFP’s hospital medicine MIG, and a pediatric academic hospitalist at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York. “Many family physicians practice hospital medicine exclusively and would prefer to take one boarding exam instead of two, and not have to do CME and board review in areas where we don’t practice anymore,” Dr. Hodo said, adding that she hopes that this decision could be revisited in the future.

A number of 1-year hospital medicine fellowships across the country provide additional training opportunities for both family practice and internal medicine residency graduates. These fellowships do not offer board certification or designated specialty credentialing for hospitalists and are not recognized by the American College of Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), which sets standards for residency and fellowship training. “But they reflect a need and an interest in optimizing the knowledge of hospital medicine and developing the specific skills needed to practice it well,” Dr. Geyer noted.

She directs a program for one to three fellows per year out of the Central Maine Family Medicine Residency program and Central Maine Medical Center in Lewiston, and is now recruiting her tenth class. At least 13 other hospital medicine fellowships, out of about 40 nationwide, are family medicine based. “We rely heavily on the Core Competencies in Hospital Medicine developed by SHM, which emphasize clinical conditions, medical procedures, and health care systems. Gaining fluency in the latter is really what makes hospital medicine unique,” Dr. Geyer said.

Often residency graduates seeking work in hospital medicine are insufficiently prepared for hospital billing and coding, enacting safe transitions of care, providing palliative care, and understanding how to impact their health care systems for quality improvement, patient safety and the like, she added.

Dr. Geyer said her fellowship does not mean just being a poorly paid hospitalist for a year. “The fellows are clearly trainees, getting the full benefit of our supervision and supplemental training focused on enhanced clinical and procedural exposure, but also on academics, quality improvement, leadership, and efficiency,” she said. “All of our fellows join SHM, go to the Annual Conference, propose case studies, do longitudinal quality or safety projects, and learn the other aspects of hospital medicine not well-taught in residency. We train them to be highly functional hospitalists right out of the gate.”

Until recently, another barrier for HTFMs was their ability to be on the faculty of internal medicine residency programs. Previous language from ACGME indicated that family medicine-trained physicians could not serve as faculty for these programs, Dr. Goldstein said. SHM has lobbied ACGME to change that rule, which could enable family medicine hospitalists who had achieved FPHM designation to be attendings and to teach internal medicine residents.
 

 

 

Needed in critical care – but not credentialed

One of the biggest frustrations for family medicine hospitalists is clarifying their role in the ICU. SHM’s Education Committee recently surveyed hospitalist members who practice in the ICU, finding that at least half felt obliged to practice beyond their scope, 90 percent occasionally perceived insufficient support from intensivists, and two-thirds reported moderate difficulty transferring patients to higher levels of intensive care.7 The respondents overwhelmingly indicated that they wanted more training and education in critical care medicine.

“I want to highlight the fact that in some settings family physicians are the sole providers of critical care,” Dr. Goldstein said. Meanwhile, the standards of the Leapfrog Group, a coalition of health care purchasers, call for ICUs to be staffed by physicians certified in critical care, even though there is a growing shortage of credentialed intensivists to treat an increasing number of older, sicker, critically ill patients.

Dr. David Aymond

Some internal medicine physicians don’t want to have anything to do with the ICU because of the medical and legal risks, said David Aymond, MD, a family physician and hospitalist at Byrd Regional Hospital in Leesville, La. “There’s a bunch of sick people in the ICU, and when some doctors like me started doing critical care, we realized we liked it. Depending on your locale, if you are doing hospital medicine, critically ill patients are going to fall in your lap,” he said. “But if you don’t have the skills, that could lead to poor outcomes and unnecessary transfers.”

Dr. Aymond started his career in family medicine. “When I got into residency, I saw how much critical care was needed in rural communities. I decided I would learn everything I could about it. I did a hospital medicine fellowship at the University of Alabama, which included considerable involvement in the ICU. When I went to Byrd Regional, a 60-bed facility with eight ICU beds, we did all of the critical care, and word started to spread in the community. My hospitalist partner and I are now on call 24/7 alternating weeks, doing the majority of the critical care and taking care of anything that goes on in an ICU at a larger center, although we often lack access to consultation services,” he explained.

“We needed to get the attention of the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) to communicate the scope of this problem. These doctors are doing critical care but there is no official medical training or recognition for them. So they’re legally out on a limb, even though often they are literally the only person available to do it,” Dr. Aymond said. “Certainly there’s a skills gap between HTFMs and board-certified intensivists, but some of that gap has to do with the volume of patients they have seen in the ICU and their comfort level,” he said.

Dr. Eric Siegal

SHM is pursuing initiatives to help address this gap, including collaborating with SCCM on developing a rigorous critical care training curriculum for internal medicine and family medicine hospitalists, with coursework drawn from existing sources, said Eric Siegal, MD, SFHM, a critical care physician in Milwaukee. “It doesn’t replace a 2-year critical care fellowship, but it will be a lot more than what’s currently out there for the nonintensivist who practices in the ICU.” SCCM has approved moving forward with the advanced training curriculum, he said.

Another priority is to try to create a pathway that could permit family medicine–trained hospitalists to apply for existing critical care fellowships, as internal medicine doctors are now able to do. SHM has lobbied ABFM to create a pathway to subspecialty certification in critical care medicine, similar to those that exist for internists and emergency physicians, Dr. Goldstein said, adding that ACGME, which controls access to fellowships, will be the next step. Dr. Aymond expects that there will be a lot of hoops to jump through.

“David Aymond is an exceptional hospitalist,” Dr. Siegal added. “He thinks and talks like an intensivist, but it took concerted and self-directed effort for him to get there. Family practitioners are a significant part of the rural critical care workforce, but their training generally does not adequately prepare them for this role – unless they have made a conscious effort to pursue additional training,” he said.

“My message to family practitioners is not that they’re not good enough to do this, but rather that they are being asked to do something they weren’t trained for. How can we help them do it well?”

References

1. Society of Hospital Medicine (SHM) Practice Analysis Committee. 2018 State of Hospital Medicine Report; Oct 2018.

2. American Academy of Family Physicians Member Census, Dec 31, 2017.

3. Jones KC et al. Hospitalists: A growing part of the primary care workforce. AAMC Analysis in Brief; June 2016; 16(5):1.

4. Berczuk C. Uniquely positioned. The Hospitalist; July 2009.

5. Iqbal Y. Family medicine hospitalists: Separate and unequal? Today’s Hospitalist; May 2007.

6. Kinnan JP. The family way. The Hospitalist; Nov 2007.

7. Sweigart JR et al. Characterizing hospitalist practice and perceptions of critical care delivery. J Hosp Med. 2018 Jan 1;13(1):6-12.

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Hospitalists trained in family medicine

Hospitalists trained in family medicine

Lori J. Heim, MD, FAAFP, a hospitalist in practice at Scotland Memorial Hospital in Laurinburg, N.C., for the past 10 years, recalls when she first decided to pursue hospital medicine as a career. As a family physician in private practice who admitted patients to the local hospital in Pinehurst, N.C., and even followed them into the ICU, she needed a more flexible schedule when she became president-elect of the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP).

Dr. Lori J. Heim

“My local hospital told me they had a policy against hiring family physicians as hospitalists. They didn’t consider us qualified,” Dr. Heim said. “I was incredulous when I first heard that because I already had full admitting privileges at the hospital. It made no sense, since they allowed me to manage my patients in the ICU.”

Then an opportunity opened at Scotland Memorial, located an hour away. “That has been a fabulous experience for me,” she said. The transition was relatively easy, following more than 2 decades of office practice. Dr. Heim’s hospitalist group now includes eight full-time clinicians who have a mix of family medicine and internal medicine backgrounds.

“I’ve never felt anything other than collegial support here. We go to the ER to evaluate patients and decide whether to admit them, and we do a lot of medical procedures. I’m not practicing pediatrics currently, but I have no problem conducting a gynecological exam. I think my experience in family medicine and primary care has been an asset,” Dr. Heim said. “I’m not sure I would be a hospitalist today if I had not been elected president of AAFP, but it was fortuitous.”

Respect for HTFMs is growing

Hospitalists trained in family medicine (HTFM) are a small but important segment of this field and of the membership of the Society of Hospital Medicine. The board specialties of physicians who work in the hospital are not always broken out in existing databases, but HTFMs are believed to represent about 8% of SHM members, and somewhere around 10%-15% of the total hospitalist workforce. According to SHM’s 2018 State of Hospital Medicine Report, 65% of hospital medicine groups employed at least one family medicine–trained provider in their group.1

SHM’s Special Interest Group (SIG) for HTFMs reports to the society’s Board of Directors. The American Academy of Family Medicine, with 131,400 members, also has a Member Interest Group (MIG) for HTFMs. When AAFP recently surveyed its members to identify their primary patient care practice location, only 4% named the hospital (not including the emergency department), while 3% said the hospital emergency department.2

Among 32,450 adult primary care-trained hospitalists surveyed for the June 2016 AAMC In Brief of the American Association of Medical Colleges, 81.9% of the hospitalists identified internal medicine as their specialty, while 5.2% identified themselves as family physicians.3 A 2014 Medical Group Management Association survey, which reported data for 4,200 hospitalists working in community hospitals, found that 82% were internal medicine trained, versus 10% in family medicine and 7% in pediatrics.

Family medicine hospitalists may be more common in rural areas or in small hospitals – where a clinician is often expected to wear more hats, said hospitalist David Goldstein, MD, FHM, assistant director of the family medicine residency program at Natividad Medical Center, Salinas, Calif., and cochair of SHM’s family medicine SIG. “In a smaller hospital, if there’s not sufficient volume to support full-time pediatric and adult hospital medicine services, a family medicine hospitalist might do both – and even help staff the ICU.”

A decade or so ago, much of the professional literature about the role of HTFMs suggested that some had experienced a lack of respect or of equal job opportunities, while others faced pay differentials.3-5 Since then, the field of hospital medicine has come a long way toward recognizing their contributions, although there are still hurdles to overcome, mainly involving issues of credentialing, to allow HTFMs to play equal roles in the hospital, the ICU, or in residency training. The SHM 2018 State of Hospital Medicine Report reveals that HTFMs actually made slightly higher salaries on average than their internist colleagues, $301,833 versus $300,030.

Dr. Claudia Geyer

Prior to the advent of hospital medicine, both family medicine and internal medicine physicians practiced in much the same way in their medical offices, and visited their patients in the hospital, said Claudia Geyer, MD, SFHM, system chief of hospital medicine at Central Maine Healthcare in Lewiston. She is trained and boarded in both family and internal medicine. “When hospital medicine launched, its heavy academic emphasis on internists led to underrecognition of the continued contributions of family medicine. Family physicians never left the hospital setting and – in certain locales – were the predominant hospitalists. We just waited for the recognition to catch up with the reality,” Dr. Geyer said.

“I don’t feel family medicine for hospitalists is nearly the stepchild of internal medicine that it was when I first started,” Dr. Heim said. “In my multihospital hospitalist group, I haven’t seen anything to suggest that they treat family medicine hospitalists as second class.” The demand for hospitalists is greater than internists can fill, while clearly the public is not concerned about these distinctions, she said.

Whether clinicians are board certified in family medicine or internal medicine may be less important to their skills for practicing in the hospital than which residency program they completed, what emphasis it placed on working in the hospital or ICU, electives completed, and other past experience. “Some family medicine residencies offer more or less hospital experience,” Dr. Heim said.

Dr. Jasen Gundersen

Jasen Gundersen, MD, MBA, CPE, SFHM, president of acute and post-acute services for the national hospital services company TeamHealth, agreed that there has been dramatic improvement in the status of HTFMs. He is one, and still practices as a hospitalist at Boca Raton (Fla.) Regional Hospital when administrative responsibilities permit.

TeamHealth has long been open to family medicine doctors, Dr. Gundersen added, although some of the medical staff at hospitals that contract with TeamHealth have issues with it. “We will talk to them about it,” he said. “We hire hospitalists who can do the work, and we evaluate them based on their background and skill set, where they’ve practiced and for how long. We want people who are experienced and good at managing hospitalized patients. For new residency grads, we look at their electives and the focus of their training.”

 

 

What is home for HTFMs?

Where are HTFMs most likely to find their professional home? “That’s hard to answer,” said Patricia Seymour, MD, FHM, FAAFP, an academic hospitalist at the University of Massachusetts-Worcester. “In the last 4-5 years, SHM has worked very hard to create a space for HTFMs. AAFP has a hospital medicine track at their annual meeting, and that’s a good thing. But they also need to protect family physicians’ right to practice in any setting they choose. For those pursuing hospital medicine, there’s a different career trajectory, different CME needs, and different recertification needs.”

Dr. Patricia Seymour

Dr. Seymour is the executive cochair of SHM’s family medicine SIG and serves as interim chief of a family medicine hospitalist group that provides inpatient training for a family practice residency, where up to a third of the 12 residents each year go on to pursue hospital medicine as a career. “We have the second-oldest family medicine–specific hospitalist group in the country, so our residency training has an emphasis on hospital medicine,” she explained.

“Because I’m a practicing hospitalist, the residents come to me seeking advice. I appreciate the training I received as a family physician in communication science, palliative care, geriatrics, family systems theory, and public health. I wouldn’t have done it any other way, and that’s how I counsel our students and residents,” she said. Others suggest that the generalist training and diverse experiences of family medicine can be a gift for a doctor who later chooses hospital medicine.

AAFP is a large umbrella organization and the majority of its members practice primary care, Dr. Heim said. “I don’t know the percentage of HTFMs who are members of AAFP. Some no doubt belong to both AAFP and SHM.” Even though both groups have recognized this important subset of their members who chose the field of hospital medicine and its status as a career track, it can be a stretch for family medicine to embrace hospitalists.

“It inherently goes against our training, which is to work in outpatient, inpatient, obstetric, pediatric, and adult settings,” Dr. Heim said. “It’s difficult to reconcile giving up a big part of what defined your training – that range of settings. I remember feeling like I should apologize to other family medicine doctors for choosing this path.”

Credentialing opportunities and barriers

For the diverse group of practicing HTFMs, credentialing and scope of practice represent their biggest current issues. A designation of Focused Practice in Hospital Medicine (FPHM) has been offered jointly since 2010 by the American Board of Family Medicine (ABFM) and the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM), although their specific requirements vary.

Eligible hospitalist candidates for the focused practice exam must have an unrestricted medical license, maintenance of current primary certification, and verification of three years of unsupervised hospital medicine practice experience. ABIM views FPHM not as a subspecialty, but as a variation of internal medicine certification, identifying diplomates who are board-certified in internal medicine with a hospital medicine specialization. They do not have to take the general internal medicine recertification exam if they qualify for FPHM.

ABFM-certified family physicians who work primarily in a hospital setting can take the same test for FPHM, with the same eligibility requirements. But ABFM does not consider focused practice a subspecialty, or the Certificate of Added Qualifications in Family Medicine as sufficient for board certification. That means family physicians also need to take its general board exam in order to maintain their ABFM board certification.

ABFM’s decision not to accept the focused practice designation as sufficient for boarding was disappointing to a lot of hospitalists, said Laura “Nell” Hodo, MD, FAAFP, chair of AAFP’s hospital medicine MIG, and a pediatric academic hospitalist at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York. “Many family physicians practice hospital medicine exclusively and would prefer to take one boarding exam instead of two, and not have to do CME and board review in areas where we don’t practice anymore,” Dr. Hodo said, adding that she hopes that this decision could be revisited in the future.

A number of 1-year hospital medicine fellowships across the country provide additional training opportunities for both family practice and internal medicine residency graduates. These fellowships do not offer board certification or designated specialty credentialing for hospitalists and are not recognized by the American College of Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), which sets standards for residency and fellowship training. “But they reflect a need and an interest in optimizing the knowledge of hospital medicine and developing the specific skills needed to practice it well,” Dr. Geyer noted.

She directs a program for one to three fellows per year out of the Central Maine Family Medicine Residency program and Central Maine Medical Center in Lewiston, and is now recruiting her tenth class. At least 13 other hospital medicine fellowships, out of about 40 nationwide, are family medicine based. “We rely heavily on the Core Competencies in Hospital Medicine developed by SHM, which emphasize clinical conditions, medical procedures, and health care systems. Gaining fluency in the latter is really what makes hospital medicine unique,” Dr. Geyer said.

Often residency graduates seeking work in hospital medicine are insufficiently prepared for hospital billing and coding, enacting safe transitions of care, providing palliative care, and understanding how to impact their health care systems for quality improvement, patient safety and the like, she added.

Dr. Geyer said her fellowship does not mean just being a poorly paid hospitalist for a year. “The fellows are clearly trainees, getting the full benefit of our supervision and supplemental training focused on enhanced clinical and procedural exposure, but also on academics, quality improvement, leadership, and efficiency,” she said. “All of our fellows join SHM, go to the Annual Conference, propose case studies, do longitudinal quality or safety projects, and learn the other aspects of hospital medicine not well-taught in residency. We train them to be highly functional hospitalists right out of the gate.”

Until recently, another barrier for HTFMs was their ability to be on the faculty of internal medicine residency programs. Previous language from ACGME indicated that family medicine-trained physicians could not serve as faculty for these programs, Dr. Goldstein said. SHM has lobbied ACGME to change that rule, which could enable family medicine hospitalists who had achieved FPHM designation to be attendings and to teach internal medicine residents.
 

 

 

Needed in critical care – but not credentialed

One of the biggest frustrations for family medicine hospitalists is clarifying their role in the ICU. SHM’s Education Committee recently surveyed hospitalist members who practice in the ICU, finding that at least half felt obliged to practice beyond their scope, 90 percent occasionally perceived insufficient support from intensivists, and two-thirds reported moderate difficulty transferring patients to higher levels of intensive care.7 The respondents overwhelmingly indicated that they wanted more training and education in critical care medicine.

“I want to highlight the fact that in some settings family physicians are the sole providers of critical care,” Dr. Goldstein said. Meanwhile, the standards of the Leapfrog Group, a coalition of health care purchasers, call for ICUs to be staffed by physicians certified in critical care, even though there is a growing shortage of credentialed intensivists to treat an increasing number of older, sicker, critically ill patients.

Dr. David Aymond

Some internal medicine physicians don’t want to have anything to do with the ICU because of the medical and legal risks, said David Aymond, MD, a family physician and hospitalist at Byrd Regional Hospital in Leesville, La. “There’s a bunch of sick people in the ICU, and when some doctors like me started doing critical care, we realized we liked it. Depending on your locale, if you are doing hospital medicine, critically ill patients are going to fall in your lap,” he said. “But if you don’t have the skills, that could lead to poor outcomes and unnecessary transfers.”

Dr. Aymond started his career in family medicine. “When I got into residency, I saw how much critical care was needed in rural communities. I decided I would learn everything I could about it. I did a hospital medicine fellowship at the University of Alabama, which included considerable involvement in the ICU. When I went to Byrd Regional, a 60-bed facility with eight ICU beds, we did all of the critical care, and word started to spread in the community. My hospitalist partner and I are now on call 24/7 alternating weeks, doing the majority of the critical care and taking care of anything that goes on in an ICU at a larger center, although we often lack access to consultation services,” he explained.

“We needed to get the attention of the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) to communicate the scope of this problem. These doctors are doing critical care but there is no official medical training or recognition for them. So they’re legally out on a limb, even though often they are literally the only person available to do it,” Dr. Aymond said. “Certainly there’s a skills gap between HTFMs and board-certified intensivists, but some of that gap has to do with the volume of patients they have seen in the ICU and their comfort level,” he said.

Dr. Eric Siegal

SHM is pursuing initiatives to help address this gap, including collaborating with SCCM on developing a rigorous critical care training curriculum for internal medicine and family medicine hospitalists, with coursework drawn from existing sources, said Eric Siegal, MD, SFHM, a critical care physician in Milwaukee. “It doesn’t replace a 2-year critical care fellowship, but it will be a lot more than what’s currently out there for the nonintensivist who practices in the ICU.” SCCM has approved moving forward with the advanced training curriculum, he said.

Another priority is to try to create a pathway that could permit family medicine–trained hospitalists to apply for existing critical care fellowships, as internal medicine doctors are now able to do. SHM has lobbied ABFM to create a pathway to subspecialty certification in critical care medicine, similar to those that exist for internists and emergency physicians, Dr. Goldstein said, adding that ACGME, which controls access to fellowships, will be the next step. Dr. Aymond expects that there will be a lot of hoops to jump through.

“David Aymond is an exceptional hospitalist,” Dr. Siegal added. “He thinks and talks like an intensivist, but it took concerted and self-directed effort for him to get there. Family practitioners are a significant part of the rural critical care workforce, but their training generally does not adequately prepare them for this role – unless they have made a conscious effort to pursue additional training,” he said.

“My message to family practitioners is not that they’re not good enough to do this, but rather that they are being asked to do something they weren’t trained for. How can we help them do it well?”

References

1. Society of Hospital Medicine (SHM) Practice Analysis Committee. 2018 State of Hospital Medicine Report; Oct 2018.

2. American Academy of Family Physicians Member Census, Dec 31, 2017.

3. Jones KC et al. Hospitalists: A growing part of the primary care workforce. AAMC Analysis in Brief; June 2016; 16(5):1.

4. Berczuk C. Uniquely positioned. The Hospitalist; July 2009.

5. Iqbal Y. Family medicine hospitalists: Separate and unequal? Today’s Hospitalist; May 2007.

6. Kinnan JP. The family way. The Hospitalist; Nov 2007.

7. Sweigart JR et al. Characterizing hospitalist practice and perceptions of critical care delivery. J Hosp Med. 2018 Jan 1;13(1):6-12.

Lori J. Heim, MD, FAAFP, a hospitalist in practice at Scotland Memorial Hospital in Laurinburg, N.C., for the past 10 years, recalls when she first decided to pursue hospital medicine as a career. As a family physician in private practice who admitted patients to the local hospital in Pinehurst, N.C., and even followed them into the ICU, she needed a more flexible schedule when she became president-elect of the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP).

Dr. Lori J. Heim

“My local hospital told me they had a policy against hiring family physicians as hospitalists. They didn’t consider us qualified,” Dr. Heim said. “I was incredulous when I first heard that because I already had full admitting privileges at the hospital. It made no sense, since they allowed me to manage my patients in the ICU.”

Then an opportunity opened at Scotland Memorial, located an hour away. “That has been a fabulous experience for me,” she said. The transition was relatively easy, following more than 2 decades of office practice. Dr. Heim’s hospitalist group now includes eight full-time clinicians who have a mix of family medicine and internal medicine backgrounds.

“I’ve never felt anything other than collegial support here. We go to the ER to evaluate patients and decide whether to admit them, and we do a lot of medical procedures. I’m not practicing pediatrics currently, but I have no problem conducting a gynecological exam. I think my experience in family medicine and primary care has been an asset,” Dr. Heim said. “I’m not sure I would be a hospitalist today if I had not been elected president of AAFP, but it was fortuitous.”

Respect for HTFMs is growing

Hospitalists trained in family medicine (HTFM) are a small but important segment of this field and of the membership of the Society of Hospital Medicine. The board specialties of physicians who work in the hospital are not always broken out in existing databases, but HTFMs are believed to represent about 8% of SHM members, and somewhere around 10%-15% of the total hospitalist workforce. According to SHM’s 2018 State of Hospital Medicine Report, 65% of hospital medicine groups employed at least one family medicine–trained provider in their group.1

SHM’s Special Interest Group (SIG) for HTFMs reports to the society’s Board of Directors. The American Academy of Family Medicine, with 131,400 members, also has a Member Interest Group (MIG) for HTFMs. When AAFP recently surveyed its members to identify their primary patient care practice location, only 4% named the hospital (not including the emergency department), while 3% said the hospital emergency department.2

Among 32,450 adult primary care-trained hospitalists surveyed for the June 2016 AAMC In Brief of the American Association of Medical Colleges, 81.9% of the hospitalists identified internal medicine as their specialty, while 5.2% identified themselves as family physicians.3 A 2014 Medical Group Management Association survey, which reported data for 4,200 hospitalists working in community hospitals, found that 82% were internal medicine trained, versus 10% in family medicine and 7% in pediatrics.

Family medicine hospitalists may be more common in rural areas or in small hospitals – where a clinician is often expected to wear more hats, said hospitalist David Goldstein, MD, FHM, assistant director of the family medicine residency program at Natividad Medical Center, Salinas, Calif., and cochair of SHM’s family medicine SIG. “In a smaller hospital, if there’s not sufficient volume to support full-time pediatric and adult hospital medicine services, a family medicine hospitalist might do both – and even help staff the ICU.”

A decade or so ago, much of the professional literature about the role of HTFMs suggested that some had experienced a lack of respect or of equal job opportunities, while others faced pay differentials.3-5 Since then, the field of hospital medicine has come a long way toward recognizing their contributions, although there are still hurdles to overcome, mainly involving issues of credentialing, to allow HTFMs to play equal roles in the hospital, the ICU, or in residency training. The SHM 2018 State of Hospital Medicine Report reveals that HTFMs actually made slightly higher salaries on average than their internist colleagues, $301,833 versus $300,030.

Dr. Claudia Geyer

Prior to the advent of hospital medicine, both family medicine and internal medicine physicians practiced in much the same way in their medical offices, and visited their patients in the hospital, said Claudia Geyer, MD, SFHM, system chief of hospital medicine at Central Maine Healthcare in Lewiston. She is trained and boarded in both family and internal medicine. “When hospital medicine launched, its heavy academic emphasis on internists led to underrecognition of the continued contributions of family medicine. Family physicians never left the hospital setting and – in certain locales – were the predominant hospitalists. We just waited for the recognition to catch up with the reality,” Dr. Geyer said.

“I don’t feel family medicine for hospitalists is nearly the stepchild of internal medicine that it was when I first started,” Dr. Heim said. “In my multihospital hospitalist group, I haven’t seen anything to suggest that they treat family medicine hospitalists as second class.” The demand for hospitalists is greater than internists can fill, while clearly the public is not concerned about these distinctions, she said.

Whether clinicians are board certified in family medicine or internal medicine may be less important to their skills for practicing in the hospital than which residency program they completed, what emphasis it placed on working in the hospital or ICU, electives completed, and other past experience. “Some family medicine residencies offer more or less hospital experience,” Dr. Heim said.

Dr. Jasen Gundersen

Jasen Gundersen, MD, MBA, CPE, SFHM, president of acute and post-acute services for the national hospital services company TeamHealth, agreed that there has been dramatic improvement in the status of HTFMs. He is one, and still practices as a hospitalist at Boca Raton (Fla.) Regional Hospital when administrative responsibilities permit.

TeamHealth has long been open to family medicine doctors, Dr. Gundersen added, although some of the medical staff at hospitals that contract with TeamHealth have issues with it. “We will talk to them about it,” he said. “We hire hospitalists who can do the work, and we evaluate them based on their background and skill set, where they’ve practiced and for how long. We want people who are experienced and good at managing hospitalized patients. For new residency grads, we look at their electives and the focus of their training.”

 

 

What is home for HTFMs?

Where are HTFMs most likely to find their professional home? “That’s hard to answer,” said Patricia Seymour, MD, FHM, FAAFP, an academic hospitalist at the University of Massachusetts-Worcester. “In the last 4-5 years, SHM has worked very hard to create a space for HTFMs. AAFP has a hospital medicine track at their annual meeting, and that’s a good thing. But they also need to protect family physicians’ right to practice in any setting they choose. For those pursuing hospital medicine, there’s a different career trajectory, different CME needs, and different recertification needs.”

Dr. Patricia Seymour

Dr. Seymour is the executive cochair of SHM’s family medicine SIG and serves as interim chief of a family medicine hospitalist group that provides inpatient training for a family practice residency, where up to a third of the 12 residents each year go on to pursue hospital medicine as a career. “We have the second-oldest family medicine–specific hospitalist group in the country, so our residency training has an emphasis on hospital medicine,” she explained.

“Because I’m a practicing hospitalist, the residents come to me seeking advice. I appreciate the training I received as a family physician in communication science, palliative care, geriatrics, family systems theory, and public health. I wouldn’t have done it any other way, and that’s how I counsel our students and residents,” she said. Others suggest that the generalist training and diverse experiences of family medicine can be a gift for a doctor who later chooses hospital medicine.

AAFP is a large umbrella organization and the majority of its members practice primary care, Dr. Heim said. “I don’t know the percentage of HTFMs who are members of AAFP. Some no doubt belong to both AAFP and SHM.” Even though both groups have recognized this important subset of their members who chose the field of hospital medicine and its status as a career track, it can be a stretch for family medicine to embrace hospitalists.

“It inherently goes against our training, which is to work in outpatient, inpatient, obstetric, pediatric, and adult settings,” Dr. Heim said. “It’s difficult to reconcile giving up a big part of what defined your training – that range of settings. I remember feeling like I should apologize to other family medicine doctors for choosing this path.”

Credentialing opportunities and barriers

For the diverse group of practicing HTFMs, credentialing and scope of practice represent their biggest current issues. A designation of Focused Practice in Hospital Medicine (FPHM) has been offered jointly since 2010 by the American Board of Family Medicine (ABFM) and the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM), although their specific requirements vary.

Eligible hospitalist candidates for the focused practice exam must have an unrestricted medical license, maintenance of current primary certification, and verification of three years of unsupervised hospital medicine practice experience. ABIM views FPHM not as a subspecialty, but as a variation of internal medicine certification, identifying diplomates who are board-certified in internal medicine with a hospital medicine specialization. They do not have to take the general internal medicine recertification exam if they qualify for FPHM.

ABFM-certified family physicians who work primarily in a hospital setting can take the same test for FPHM, with the same eligibility requirements. But ABFM does not consider focused practice a subspecialty, or the Certificate of Added Qualifications in Family Medicine as sufficient for board certification. That means family physicians also need to take its general board exam in order to maintain their ABFM board certification.

ABFM’s decision not to accept the focused practice designation as sufficient for boarding was disappointing to a lot of hospitalists, said Laura “Nell” Hodo, MD, FAAFP, chair of AAFP’s hospital medicine MIG, and a pediatric academic hospitalist at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York. “Many family physicians practice hospital medicine exclusively and would prefer to take one boarding exam instead of two, and not have to do CME and board review in areas where we don’t practice anymore,” Dr. Hodo said, adding that she hopes that this decision could be revisited in the future.

A number of 1-year hospital medicine fellowships across the country provide additional training opportunities for both family practice and internal medicine residency graduates. These fellowships do not offer board certification or designated specialty credentialing for hospitalists and are not recognized by the American College of Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), which sets standards for residency and fellowship training. “But they reflect a need and an interest in optimizing the knowledge of hospital medicine and developing the specific skills needed to practice it well,” Dr. Geyer noted.

She directs a program for one to three fellows per year out of the Central Maine Family Medicine Residency program and Central Maine Medical Center in Lewiston, and is now recruiting her tenth class. At least 13 other hospital medicine fellowships, out of about 40 nationwide, are family medicine based. “We rely heavily on the Core Competencies in Hospital Medicine developed by SHM, which emphasize clinical conditions, medical procedures, and health care systems. Gaining fluency in the latter is really what makes hospital medicine unique,” Dr. Geyer said.

Often residency graduates seeking work in hospital medicine are insufficiently prepared for hospital billing and coding, enacting safe transitions of care, providing palliative care, and understanding how to impact their health care systems for quality improvement, patient safety and the like, she added.

Dr. Geyer said her fellowship does not mean just being a poorly paid hospitalist for a year. “The fellows are clearly trainees, getting the full benefit of our supervision and supplemental training focused on enhanced clinical and procedural exposure, but also on academics, quality improvement, leadership, and efficiency,” she said. “All of our fellows join SHM, go to the Annual Conference, propose case studies, do longitudinal quality or safety projects, and learn the other aspects of hospital medicine not well-taught in residency. We train them to be highly functional hospitalists right out of the gate.”

Until recently, another barrier for HTFMs was their ability to be on the faculty of internal medicine residency programs. Previous language from ACGME indicated that family medicine-trained physicians could not serve as faculty for these programs, Dr. Goldstein said. SHM has lobbied ACGME to change that rule, which could enable family medicine hospitalists who had achieved FPHM designation to be attendings and to teach internal medicine residents.
 

 

 

Needed in critical care – but not credentialed

One of the biggest frustrations for family medicine hospitalists is clarifying their role in the ICU. SHM’s Education Committee recently surveyed hospitalist members who practice in the ICU, finding that at least half felt obliged to practice beyond their scope, 90 percent occasionally perceived insufficient support from intensivists, and two-thirds reported moderate difficulty transferring patients to higher levels of intensive care.7 The respondents overwhelmingly indicated that they wanted more training and education in critical care medicine.

“I want to highlight the fact that in some settings family physicians are the sole providers of critical care,” Dr. Goldstein said. Meanwhile, the standards of the Leapfrog Group, a coalition of health care purchasers, call for ICUs to be staffed by physicians certified in critical care, even though there is a growing shortage of credentialed intensivists to treat an increasing number of older, sicker, critically ill patients.

Dr. David Aymond

Some internal medicine physicians don’t want to have anything to do with the ICU because of the medical and legal risks, said David Aymond, MD, a family physician and hospitalist at Byrd Regional Hospital in Leesville, La. “There’s a bunch of sick people in the ICU, and when some doctors like me started doing critical care, we realized we liked it. Depending on your locale, if you are doing hospital medicine, critically ill patients are going to fall in your lap,” he said. “But if you don’t have the skills, that could lead to poor outcomes and unnecessary transfers.”

Dr. Aymond started his career in family medicine. “When I got into residency, I saw how much critical care was needed in rural communities. I decided I would learn everything I could about it. I did a hospital medicine fellowship at the University of Alabama, which included considerable involvement in the ICU. When I went to Byrd Regional, a 60-bed facility with eight ICU beds, we did all of the critical care, and word started to spread in the community. My hospitalist partner and I are now on call 24/7 alternating weeks, doing the majority of the critical care and taking care of anything that goes on in an ICU at a larger center, although we often lack access to consultation services,” he explained.

“We needed to get the attention of the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) to communicate the scope of this problem. These doctors are doing critical care but there is no official medical training or recognition for them. So they’re legally out on a limb, even though often they are literally the only person available to do it,” Dr. Aymond said. “Certainly there’s a skills gap between HTFMs and board-certified intensivists, but some of that gap has to do with the volume of patients they have seen in the ICU and their comfort level,” he said.

Dr. Eric Siegal

SHM is pursuing initiatives to help address this gap, including collaborating with SCCM on developing a rigorous critical care training curriculum for internal medicine and family medicine hospitalists, with coursework drawn from existing sources, said Eric Siegal, MD, SFHM, a critical care physician in Milwaukee. “It doesn’t replace a 2-year critical care fellowship, but it will be a lot more than what’s currently out there for the nonintensivist who practices in the ICU.” SCCM has approved moving forward with the advanced training curriculum, he said.

Another priority is to try to create a pathway that could permit family medicine–trained hospitalists to apply for existing critical care fellowships, as internal medicine doctors are now able to do. SHM has lobbied ABFM to create a pathway to subspecialty certification in critical care medicine, similar to those that exist for internists and emergency physicians, Dr. Goldstein said, adding that ACGME, which controls access to fellowships, will be the next step. Dr. Aymond expects that there will be a lot of hoops to jump through.

“David Aymond is an exceptional hospitalist,” Dr. Siegal added. “He thinks and talks like an intensivist, but it took concerted and self-directed effort for him to get there. Family practitioners are a significant part of the rural critical care workforce, but their training generally does not adequately prepare them for this role – unless they have made a conscious effort to pursue additional training,” he said.

“My message to family practitioners is not that they’re not good enough to do this, but rather that they are being asked to do something they weren’t trained for. How can we help them do it well?”

References

1. Society of Hospital Medicine (SHM) Practice Analysis Committee. 2018 State of Hospital Medicine Report; Oct 2018.

2. American Academy of Family Physicians Member Census, Dec 31, 2017.

3. Jones KC et al. Hospitalists: A growing part of the primary care workforce. AAMC Analysis in Brief; June 2016; 16(5):1.

4. Berczuk C. Uniquely positioned. The Hospitalist; July 2009.

5. Iqbal Y. Family medicine hospitalists: Separate and unequal? Today’s Hospitalist; May 2007.

6. Kinnan JP. The family way. The Hospitalist; Nov 2007.

7. Sweigart JR et al. Characterizing hospitalist practice and perceptions of critical care delivery. J Hosp Med. 2018 Jan 1;13(1):6-12.

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