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How can hospitalists change the status quo?
Lean framework for efficiency and empathy of care
“My census is too high.”
“I don’t have enough time to talk to patients.”
“These are outside our scope of practice.”
These are statements that I have heard from colleagues over the last fourteen years as a hospitalist. Back in 1996, when Dr. Bob Wachter coined the term ‘hospitalist,’ we were still in our infancy – the scope of what we could do had yet to be fully realized. Our focus was on providing care for hospitalized patients and improving quality of clinical care and patient safety. As health care organizations began to see the potential for our field, the demands on our services grew. We grew to comanage patients with our surgical colleagues, worked on patient satisfaction, facilitated transitions of care, and attempted to reduce readmissions – all of which improved patient care and the bottom line for our organizations.
Somewhere along the way, we were expected to staff high patient volumes to add more value, but this always seemed to come with compromise in another aspect of care or our own well-being. After all, there are only so many hours in the day and a limit on what one individual can accomplish in that time.
One of the reasons I love hospital medicine is the novelty of what we do – we are creative thinkers. We have the capacity to innovate solutions to hospital problems based on our expertise as frontline providers for our patients. Hospitalists of every discipline staff a large majority of inpatients, which makes our collective experience significant to the management of inpatient health care. We are often the ones tasked with executing improvement projects, but how often are we involved in their design? I know that we collectively have an enormous opportunity to improve our health care practice, both for ourselves, our patients, and the institutions we work for. But more than just being a voice of advocacy, we need to understand how to positively influence the health care structures that allow us to deliver quality patient care.
It is no surprise that the inefficiencies we deal with in our hospitals are many – daily workflow interruptions, delays in results, scheduling issues, communication difficulties. These are not unique to any one institution. The pandemic added more to that plate – PPE deficiencies, patient volume triage, and resource management are examples. Hospitals often contract consultants to help solve these problems, and many utilize a variety of frameworks to improve these system processes. The Lean framework is one of these, and it originated in the manufacturing industry to eliminate waste in systems in the pursuit of efficiency.
In my business training and prior hospital medicine leadership roles, I was educated in Lean thinking and methodologies for improving quality and applied its principles to projects for improving workflow. Last year I attended a virtual conference on ‘Lean Innovation during the pandemic’ for New York region hospitals, and it again highlighted how the Lean management methodology can help improve patient care but importantly, our workflow as clinicians. This got me thinking. Why is Lean well accepted in business and manufacturing circles, but less so in health care?
I think the answer is twofold – knowledge and people.
What is Lean and how can it help us?
The ‘Toyota Production System’-based philosophy has 14 core principles that help eliminate waste in systems in pursuit of efficiency. These principles are the “Toyota Way.” They center around two pillars: continuous improvement and respect for people. The cornerstone of this management methodology is based on efficient processes, developing employees to add value to the organization and continuous improvement through problem-solving and organizational learning.
Lean is often implemented with Six Sigma methodology. Six Sigma has its origins in Motorola. While Lean cuts waste in our systems to provide value, Six Sigma uses DMAIC (Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, Control) to reduce variation in our processes. When done in its entirety, Lean Six Sigma methodology adds value by increasing efficiency, reducing cost, and improving our everyday work.
Statistical principles suggest that 80% of consequences comes from 20% of causes. Lean methodology and tools allow us to systematically identify root causes for the problems we face and help narrow it down to the ‘vital few.’ In other words, fixing these would give us the most bang for our buck. As hospitalists, we are able to do this better than most because we work in these hospital processes everyday – we truly know the strengths and weaknesses of our systems.
As a hospitalist, I would love for the process of seeing patients in hospitals to be more efficient, less variable, and be more cost-effective for my institution. By eliminating the time wasted performing unnecessary and redundant tasks in my everyday work, I can reallocate that time to patient care – the very reason I chose a career in medicine.
We, the people
There are two common rebuttals I hear for adopting Lean Six Sigma methodology in health care. A frequent misconception is that Lean is all about reducing staff or time with patients. The second is that manufacturing methodologies do not work for a service profession. For instance, an article published on Reuters Events (www.reutersevents.com/supplychain/supply-chain/end-just-time) talks about Lean JIT (Just In Time) inventory as a culprit for creating a supply chain deficit during COVID-19. It is not entirely without merit. However, if done the correct way, Lean is all about involving the frontline worker to create a workflow that would work best for them.
Reducing the waste in our processes and empowering our frontline doctors to be creative in finding solutions naturally leads to cost reduction. The cornerstone of Lean is creating a continuously learning organization and putting your employees at the forefront. I think it is important that Lean principles be utilized within health care – but we cannot push to fix every problem in our systems to perfection at a significant expense to the physician and other health care staff.
Why HM can benefit from Lean
There is no hard and fast rule about the way health care should adopt Lean thinking. It is a way of thinking that aims to balance purpose, people, and process – extremes of inventory management may not be necessary to be successful in health care. Lean tools alone would not create results. John Shook, chairman of Lean Global Network, has said that the social side of Lean needs to be in balance with the technical side. In other words, rigidity and efficiency is good, but so is encouraging creativity and flexibility in thinking within the workforce.
In the crisis created by the novel coronavirus, many hospitals in New York state, including my own, turned to Lean to respond quickly and effectively to the challenges. Lean principles helped them problem-solve and develop strategies to both recover from the pandemic surge and adapt to future problems that could occur. Geographic clustering of patients, PPE supply, OR shut down and ramp up, emergency management offices at the peak of the pandemic, telehealth streamlining, and post-COVID-19 care planning are some areas where the application of Lean resulted in successful responses to the challenges that 2020 brought to our work.
As Warren Bennis said, ‘The manager accepts the status quo; the leader challenges it.’ As hospitalists, we can lead the way our hospitals provide care. Lean is not just a way for hospitals to cut costs (although it helps quite a bit there). Its processes and philosophies could enable hospitalists to maximize potential, efficiency, quality of care, and allow for a balanced work environment. When applied in a manner that focuses on continuous improvement (and is cognizant of its limitations), it has the potential to increase the capability of our service lines and streamline our processes and workday for greater efficiency. As a specialty, we stand to benefit by taking the lead role in choosing how best to improve how we work. We should think outside the box. What better time to do this than now?
Dr. Kanikkannan is a practicing hospitalist and assistant professor of medicine at Albany (N.Y) Medical College. She is a former hospitalist medical director and has served on SHM’s national committees, and is a certified Lean Six Sigma black belt and MBA candidate.
Lean framework for efficiency and empathy of care
Lean framework for efficiency and empathy of care
“My census is too high.”
“I don’t have enough time to talk to patients.”
“These are outside our scope of practice.”
These are statements that I have heard from colleagues over the last fourteen years as a hospitalist. Back in 1996, when Dr. Bob Wachter coined the term ‘hospitalist,’ we were still in our infancy – the scope of what we could do had yet to be fully realized. Our focus was on providing care for hospitalized patients and improving quality of clinical care and patient safety. As health care organizations began to see the potential for our field, the demands on our services grew. We grew to comanage patients with our surgical colleagues, worked on patient satisfaction, facilitated transitions of care, and attempted to reduce readmissions – all of which improved patient care and the bottom line for our organizations.
Somewhere along the way, we were expected to staff high patient volumes to add more value, but this always seemed to come with compromise in another aspect of care or our own well-being. After all, there are only so many hours in the day and a limit on what one individual can accomplish in that time.
One of the reasons I love hospital medicine is the novelty of what we do – we are creative thinkers. We have the capacity to innovate solutions to hospital problems based on our expertise as frontline providers for our patients. Hospitalists of every discipline staff a large majority of inpatients, which makes our collective experience significant to the management of inpatient health care. We are often the ones tasked with executing improvement projects, but how often are we involved in their design? I know that we collectively have an enormous opportunity to improve our health care practice, both for ourselves, our patients, and the institutions we work for. But more than just being a voice of advocacy, we need to understand how to positively influence the health care structures that allow us to deliver quality patient care.
It is no surprise that the inefficiencies we deal with in our hospitals are many – daily workflow interruptions, delays in results, scheduling issues, communication difficulties. These are not unique to any one institution. The pandemic added more to that plate – PPE deficiencies, patient volume triage, and resource management are examples. Hospitals often contract consultants to help solve these problems, and many utilize a variety of frameworks to improve these system processes. The Lean framework is one of these, and it originated in the manufacturing industry to eliminate waste in systems in the pursuit of efficiency.
In my business training and prior hospital medicine leadership roles, I was educated in Lean thinking and methodologies for improving quality and applied its principles to projects for improving workflow. Last year I attended a virtual conference on ‘Lean Innovation during the pandemic’ for New York region hospitals, and it again highlighted how the Lean management methodology can help improve patient care but importantly, our workflow as clinicians. This got me thinking. Why is Lean well accepted in business and manufacturing circles, but less so in health care?
I think the answer is twofold – knowledge and people.
What is Lean and how can it help us?
The ‘Toyota Production System’-based philosophy has 14 core principles that help eliminate waste in systems in pursuit of efficiency. These principles are the “Toyota Way.” They center around two pillars: continuous improvement and respect for people. The cornerstone of this management methodology is based on efficient processes, developing employees to add value to the organization and continuous improvement through problem-solving and organizational learning.
Lean is often implemented with Six Sigma methodology. Six Sigma has its origins in Motorola. While Lean cuts waste in our systems to provide value, Six Sigma uses DMAIC (Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, Control) to reduce variation in our processes. When done in its entirety, Lean Six Sigma methodology adds value by increasing efficiency, reducing cost, and improving our everyday work.
Statistical principles suggest that 80% of consequences comes from 20% of causes. Lean methodology and tools allow us to systematically identify root causes for the problems we face and help narrow it down to the ‘vital few.’ In other words, fixing these would give us the most bang for our buck. As hospitalists, we are able to do this better than most because we work in these hospital processes everyday – we truly know the strengths and weaknesses of our systems.
As a hospitalist, I would love for the process of seeing patients in hospitals to be more efficient, less variable, and be more cost-effective for my institution. By eliminating the time wasted performing unnecessary and redundant tasks in my everyday work, I can reallocate that time to patient care – the very reason I chose a career in medicine.
We, the people
There are two common rebuttals I hear for adopting Lean Six Sigma methodology in health care. A frequent misconception is that Lean is all about reducing staff or time with patients. The second is that manufacturing methodologies do not work for a service profession. For instance, an article published on Reuters Events (www.reutersevents.com/supplychain/supply-chain/end-just-time) talks about Lean JIT (Just In Time) inventory as a culprit for creating a supply chain deficit during COVID-19. It is not entirely without merit. However, if done the correct way, Lean is all about involving the frontline worker to create a workflow that would work best for them.
Reducing the waste in our processes and empowering our frontline doctors to be creative in finding solutions naturally leads to cost reduction. The cornerstone of Lean is creating a continuously learning organization and putting your employees at the forefront. I think it is important that Lean principles be utilized within health care – but we cannot push to fix every problem in our systems to perfection at a significant expense to the physician and other health care staff.
Why HM can benefit from Lean
There is no hard and fast rule about the way health care should adopt Lean thinking. It is a way of thinking that aims to balance purpose, people, and process – extremes of inventory management may not be necessary to be successful in health care. Lean tools alone would not create results. John Shook, chairman of Lean Global Network, has said that the social side of Lean needs to be in balance with the technical side. In other words, rigidity and efficiency is good, but so is encouraging creativity and flexibility in thinking within the workforce.
In the crisis created by the novel coronavirus, many hospitals in New York state, including my own, turned to Lean to respond quickly and effectively to the challenges. Lean principles helped them problem-solve and develop strategies to both recover from the pandemic surge and adapt to future problems that could occur. Geographic clustering of patients, PPE supply, OR shut down and ramp up, emergency management offices at the peak of the pandemic, telehealth streamlining, and post-COVID-19 care planning are some areas where the application of Lean resulted in successful responses to the challenges that 2020 brought to our work.
As Warren Bennis said, ‘The manager accepts the status quo; the leader challenges it.’ As hospitalists, we can lead the way our hospitals provide care. Lean is not just a way for hospitals to cut costs (although it helps quite a bit there). Its processes and philosophies could enable hospitalists to maximize potential, efficiency, quality of care, and allow for a balanced work environment. When applied in a manner that focuses on continuous improvement (and is cognizant of its limitations), it has the potential to increase the capability of our service lines and streamline our processes and workday for greater efficiency. As a specialty, we stand to benefit by taking the lead role in choosing how best to improve how we work. We should think outside the box. What better time to do this than now?
Dr. Kanikkannan is a practicing hospitalist and assistant professor of medicine at Albany (N.Y) Medical College. She is a former hospitalist medical director and has served on SHM’s national committees, and is a certified Lean Six Sigma black belt and MBA candidate.
“My census is too high.”
“I don’t have enough time to talk to patients.”
“These are outside our scope of practice.”
These are statements that I have heard from colleagues over the last fourteen years as a hospitalist. Back in 1996, when Dr. Bob Wachter coined the term ‘hospitalist,’ we were still in our infancy – the scope of what we could do had yet to be fully realized. Our focus was on providing care for hospitalized patients and improving quality of clinical care and patient safety. As health care organizations began to see the potential for our field, the demands on our services grew. We grew to comanage patients with our surgical colleagues, worked on patient satisfaction, facilitated transitions of care, and attempted to reduce readmissions – all of which improved patient care and the bottom line for our organizations.
Somewhere along the way, we were expected to staff high patient volumes to add more value, but this always seemed to come with compromise in another aspect of care or our own well-being. After all, there are only so many hours in the day and a limit on what one individual can accomplish in that time.
One of the reasons I love hospital medicine is the novelty of what we do – we are creative thinkers. We have the capacity to innovate solutions to hospital problems based on our expertise as frontline providers for our patients. Hospitalists of every discipline staff a large majority of inpatients, which makes our collective experience significant to the management of inpatient health care. We are often the ones tasked with executing improvement projects, but how often are we involved in their design? I know that we collectively have an enormous opportunity to improve our health care practice, both for ourselves, our patients, and the institutions we work for. But more than just being a voice of advocacy, we need to understand how to positively influence the health care structures that allow us to deliver quality patient care.
It is no surprise that the inefficiencies we deal with in our hospitals are many – daily workflow interruptions, delays in results, scheduling issues, communication difficulties. These are not unique to any one institution. The pandemic added more to that plate – PPE deficiencies, patient volume triage, and resource management are examples. Hospitals often contract consultants to help solve these problems, and many utilize a variety of frameworks to improve these system processes. The Lean framework is one of these, and it originated in the manufacturing industry to eliminate waste in systems in the pursuit of efficiency.
In my business training and prior hospital medicine leadership roles, I was educated in Lean thinking and methodologies for improving quality and applied its principles to projects for improving workflow. Last year I attended a virtual conference on ‘Lean Innovation during the pandemic’ for New York region hospitals, and it again highlighted how the Lean management methodology can help improve patient care but importantly, our workflow as clinicians. This got me thinking. Why is Lean well accepted in business and manufacturing circles, but less so in health care?
I think the answer is twofold – knowledge and people.
What is Lean and how can it help us?
The ‘Toyota Production System’-based philosophy has 14 core principles that help eliminate waste in systems in pursuit of efficiency. These principles are the “Toyota Way.” They center around two pillars: continuous improvement and respect for people. The cornerstone of this management methodology is based on efficient processes, developing employees to add value to the organization and continuous improvement through problem-solving and organizational learning.
Lean is often implemented with Six Sigma methodology. Six Sigma has its origins in Motorola. While Lean cuts waste in our systems to provide value, Six Sigma uses DMAIC (Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, Control) to reduce variation in our processes. When done in its entirety, Lean Six Sigma methodology adds value by increasing efficiency, reducing cost, and improving our everyday work.
Statistical principles suggest that 80% of consequences comes from 20% of causes. Lean methodology and tools allow us to systematically identify root causes for the problems we face and help narrow it down to the ‘vital few.’ In other words, fixing these would give us the most bang for our buck. As hospitalists, we are able to do this better than most because we work in these hospital processes everyday – we truly know the strengths and weaknesses of our systems.
As a hospitalist, I would love for the process of seeing patients in hospitals to be more efficient, less variable, and be more cost-effective for my institution. By eliminating the time wasted performing unnecessary and redundant tasks in my everyday work, I can reallocate that time to patient care – the very reason I chose a career in medicine.
We, the people
There are two common rebuttals I hear for adopting Lean Six Sigma methodology in health care. A frequent misconception is that Lean is all about reducing staff or time with patients. The second is that manufacturing methodologies do not work for a service profession. For instance, an article published on Reuters Events (www.reutersevents.com/supplychain/supply-chain/end-just-time) talks about Lean JIT (Just In Time) inventory as a culprit for creating a supply chain deficit during COVID-19. It is not entirely without merit. However, if done the correct way, Lean is all about involving the frontline worker to create a workflow that would work best for them.
Reducing the waste in our processes and empowering our frontline doctors to be creative in finding solutions naturally leads to cost reduction. The cornerstone of Lean is creating a continuously learning organization and putting your employees at the forefront. I think it is important that Lean principles be utilized within health care – but we cannot push to fix every problem in our systems to perfection at a significant expense to the physician and other health care staff.
Why HM can benefit from Lean
There is no hard and fast rule about the way health care should adopt Lean thinking. It is a way of thinking that aims to balance purpose, people, and process – extremes of inventory management may not be necessary to be successful in health care. Lean tools alone would not create results. John Shook, chairman of Lean Global Network, has said that the social side of Lean needs to be in balance with the technical side. In other words, rigidity and efficiency is good, but so is encouraging creativity and flexibility in thinking within the workforce.
In the crisis created by the novel coronavirus, many hospitals in New York state, including my own, turned to Lean to respond quickly and effectively to the challenges. Lean principles helped them problem-solve and develop strategies to both recover from the pandemic surge and adapt to future problems that could occur. Geographic clustering of patients, PPE supply, OR shut down and ramp up, emergency management offices at the peak of the pandemic, telehealth streamlining, and post-COVID-19 care planning are some areas where the application of Lean resulted in successful responses to the challenges that 2020 brought to our work.
As Warren Bennis said, ‘The manager accepts the status quo; the leader challenges it.’ As hospitalists, we can lead the way our hospitals provide care. Lean is not just a way for hospitals to cut costs (although it helps quite a bit there). Its processes and philosophies could enable hospitalists to maximize potential, efficiency, quality of care, and allow for a balanced work environment. When applied in a manner that focuses on continuous improvement (and is cognizant of its limitations), it has the potential to increase the capability of our service lines and streamline our processes and workday for greater efficiency. As a specialty, we stand to benefit by taking the lead role in choosing how best to improve how we work. We should think outside the box. What better time to do this than now?
Dr. Kanikkannan is a practicing hospitalist and assistant professor of medicine at Albany (N.Y) Medical College. She is a former hospitalist medical director and has served on SHM’s national committees, and is a certified Lean Six Sigma black belt and MBA candidate.
Racism in medicine: Implicit and explicit
With the shootings of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, and other Black citizens setting off protests and unrest, race was at the forefront of national conversation in the United States – along with COVID-19 – over the past year.
“We’ve heard things like, ‘We’re in a post-racial society,’ but I think 2020 in particular has emphasized that we’re not,” said Gregory Johnson, MD, SFHM, chief medical officer of hospital medicine at Sound Physicians, a national physician practice. “Racism is very present in our lives, it’s very present in our world, and it is absolutely present in medicine.”
Yes, race is still an issue in the U.S. as we head into 2021, though this may have come as something of a surprise to people who do not live with racism daily.
“If you have a brain, you have bias, and that bias will likely apply to race as well,” Dr. Johnson said. “When we’re talking about institutional racism, the educational system and the media have led us to create presumptions and prejudices that we don’t necessarily recognize off the top because they’ve just been a part of the fabric of who we are as we’ve grown up.”
The term “racism” has extremely negative connotations because there’s character judgment attached to it, but to say someone is racist or racially insensitive does not equate them with being a Klansman, said Dr. Johnson. “I think we as people have to acknowledge that, yes, it’s possible for me to be racist and I might not be 100% aware of it. It’s being open to the possibility – or rather probability – that you are and then taking steps to figure out how you can address that, so you can limit it. And that requires constant self-evaluation and work,” he said.
Racism in the medical environment
Institutional racism is evident before students are even accepted into medical school, said Areeba Kara, MD, SFHM, associate professor of clinical medicine at Indiana University, Indianapolis, and a hospitalist at IU Health Physicians.
Mean MCAT scores are lower for applicants traditionally underrepresented in medicine (UIM) compared to the scores of well-represented groups.1 “Lower scores are associated with lower acceptance rates into medical school,” Dr. Kara said. “These differences reflect unequal educational opportunities rooted in centuries of legal discrimination.”
Racism is apparent in both the hidden medical education curriculum and in lessons implicitly taught to students, said Ndidi Unaka, MD, MEd, associate program director of the pediatric residency training program at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital.
“These lessons inform the way in which we as physicians see our patients, each other, and how we practice,” she said. “We reinforce race-based medicine and shape clinical decision making through flawed guidelines and practices, which exacerbates health inequities. We teach that race – rather than racism – is a risk factor for poor health outcomes. Our students and trainees watch as we assume the worst of our patients from marginalized communities of color.”
Terms describing patients of color, such as “difficult,” “non-compliant,” or “frequent flyer” are thrown around and sometimes, instead of finding out why, “we view these states of being as static, root causes for poor outcomes rather than symptoms of social conditions and obstacles that impact overall health and wellbeing,” Dr. Unaka said.
Leadership opportunities
Though hospital medicine is a growing field, Dr. Kara noted that the 2020 State of Hospital Medicine Report found that only 5.5% of hospital medical group leaders were Black, and just 2.2% were Hispanic/Latino.2 “I think these numbers speak for themselves,” she said.
Dr. Unaka said that the lack of UIM hospitalists and physician leaders creates fewer opportunities for “race-concordant mentorship relationships.” It also forces UIM physicians to shoulder more responsibilities – often obligations that do little to help them move forward in their careers – all in the name of diversity. And when UIM physicians are given leadership opportunities, Dr. Unaka said they are often unsure as to whether their appointments are genuine or just a hollow gesture made for the sake of diversity.
Dr. Johnson pointed out that Black and Latinx populations primarily get their care from hospital-based specialties, yet this is not reflected in the number of UIM practitioners in leadership roles. He said race and ethnicity, as well as gender, need to be factors when individuals are evaluated for leadership opportunities – for the individual’s sake, as well as for the community he or she is serving.
“When we can evaluate for unconscious bias and factor in that diverse groups tend to have better outcomes, whether it’s business or clinical outcomes, it’s one of the opportunities that we collectively have in the specialty to improve what we’re delivering for hospitals and, more importantly, for patients,” he said.
Relationships with colleagues and patients
Racism creeps into interactions and relationships with others as well, whether it’s between clinicians, clinician to patient, or patient to clinician. Sometimes it’s blatant; often it’s subtle.
A common, recurring example Dr. Unaka has experienced in the clinician to clinician relationship is being confused for other Black physicians, making her feel invisible. “The everyday verbal, nonverbal, and environmental slights, snubs, or insults from colleagues are frequent and contribute to feelings of exclusion, isolation, and exhaustion,” she said. Despite this, she is still expected to “address microaggressions and other forms of interpersonal racism and find ways to move through professional spaces in spite of the trauma, fear, and stress associated with my reality and lived experiences.” She said that clinicians who remain silent on the topic of racism participate in the violence and contribute to the disillusionment of UIM physicians.
Dr. Kara said that the discrimination from the health care team is the hardest to deal with. In the clinician to clinician relationship, there is a sense among UIM physicians that they’re being watched more closely and “have to prove themselves at every single turn.” Unfortunately, this comes from the environment, which tends to be adversarial rather than supportive and nurturing, she said.
“There are lots of opportunities for racism or racial insensitivity to crop up from clinician to clinician,” said Dr. Johnson. When he started his career as a physician after his training, Dr. Johnson was informed that his colleagues were watching him because they were not sure about his clinical skills. The fact that he was a former chief resident and board certified in two specialties did not seem to make any difference.
Patients refusing care from UIM physicians or expressing disapproval – both verbal and nonverbal – of such care, happens all too often. “It’s easier for me to excuse patients and their families as we often meet them on their worst days,” said Dr. Kara. Still, “understanding my oath to care for people and do no harm, but at the same time, recognizing that this is an individual that is rejecting my care without having any idea of who I am as a physician is frustrating,” Dr. Johnson acknowledged.
Then there’s the complex clinician to patient relationship, which research clearly shows contributes to health disparities.3 For one thing, the physician workforce does not reflect the patient population, Dr. Unaka said. “We cannot ignore the lack of race concordance between patients and clinicians, nor can the continued misplacement of blame for medical mistrust be at the feet of our patients,” she said.
Dr. Unaka feels that clinicians need to accept both that health inequities exist and that frontline physicians themselves contribute to the inequities. “Our diagnostic and therapeutic decisions are not immune to bias and are influenced by our deeply held beliefs about specific populations,” she said. “And the health care system that our patients navigate is no different than other systems, settings, and environments that are marred by racism in all its forms.”
Systemic racism greatly impacts patient care, said Dr. Kara. She pointed to several examples: Research showing that race concordance between patients and providers in an emergency department setting led to better pain control with fewer analgesics.4 The high maternal and infant mortality rates amongst Black women and children.5 Evidence of poorer outcomes in sepsis patients with limited English proficiency.6 “There are plenty more,” she said. “We need to be asking ourselves what we are going to do about it.”
Moving forward
That racial biases are steeped so thoroughly into our culture and consciousness means that moving beyond them is a continual, purposeful work in progress. But it is work that is critical for everyone, and certainly necessary for those who care for their fellow human beings when they are in a vulnerable state.
Health care systems need to move toward equity – giving everyone what they need to thrive – rather than focusing on equality – giving everyone the same thing, said Jenny Baenziger, MD, assistant professor of clinical medicine and pediatrics at Indiana University, Indianapolis, and associate director of education at IU Center for Global Health. “We know that minoritized patients are going to need more attention, more advocacy, more sensitivity, and more creative solutions in order to help them achieve health in a world that is often stacked against them,” she said.
“The unique needs of each patient, family unit, and/or population must be taken into consideration,” said Dr. Unaka. She said hospitalists need to embrace creative approaches that can better serve the specific needs of patients. Equitable practices should be the default, which means data transparency, thoroughly dissecting hospital processes to find existing inequities, giving stakeholders – especially patients and families of color – a voice, and tearing down oppressive systems that contribute to poor health outcomes and oppression, she said.
“It’s time for us to talk about racism openly,” said Dr. Kara. “Believe your colleagues when they share their fears and treat each other with respect. We should be actively learning about and celebrating our diversity.” She encourages finding out what your institution is doing on this front and getting involved.
Dr. Johnson believes that first and foremost, hospitalists need to be exposed to the data on health care disparities. “The next step is asking what we as hospitalists, or any other specialty, can do to intervene and improve in those areas,” he said. Focusing on unconscious bias training is important, he said, so clinicians can see what biases they might be bringing into the hospital and to the bedside. Maintaining a diverse workforce and bringing UIM physicians into leadership roles to encourage diversity of ideas and approaches are also critical to promoting equity, he said.
“You cannot fix what you cannot face,” said Dr. Unaka. Education on how racism impacts patients and colleagues is essential, she believes, as is advocacy for changing inequitable health system policies. She recommends expanding social and professional circles. “Diverse social groups allow us to consider the perspectives of others; diverse professional groups allow us to ask better research questions and practice better medicine.”
Start by developing the ability to question personal assumptions and pinpoint implicit biases, suggested Dr. Baenziger. “Asking for feedback can be scary and difficult, but we should take a deep breath and do it anyway,” she said. “Simply ask your team, ‘I’ve been thinking a lot about racial equity and disparities. How can I do better at my interactions with people of color? What are my blind spots?’” Dr. Baenziger said that “to help us remember how beautifully complicated and diverse people are,” all health care professionals need to watch Nigerian novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s TED talk “The Danger of a Single Story.”
Dr. Baenziger also stressed the importance of conversations about “places where race is built into our clinical assessments, like eGFR,” as well as being aware that many of the research studies that are used to support everyday clinical decisions didn’t include people of color. She also encouraged clinicians to consider how and when they include race in their notes.7 “Is it really helpful to make sure people know right away that you are treating a ‘46-year-old Hispanic male’ or can the fact that he is Hispanic be saved for the social history section with other important details of his life such as being a father, veteran, and mechanic?” she asked.
“Racism is real and very much a part of our history. We can no longer be in denial regarding the racism that exists in medicine and the impact it has on our patients,” Dr. Unaka said. “As a profession, we cannot hide behind our espoused core values. We must live up to them.”
References
1. Lucey CR, Saguil, A. The Consequences of Structural Racism on MCAT Scores and Medical School Admissions: The Past Is Prologue. Acad Med. 2020 Mar;95(3):351-356. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002939.
2. Flores L. Increasing racial diversity in hospital medicine’s leadership ranks. The Hospitalist. 2020 Oct 21.
3. Smedley BD, et al, eds. Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care. Institute of Medicine Committee on Understanding and Eliminating Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care. Washington: National Academies Press; 2003.
4. Heins A, et al. Physician Race/Ethnicity Predicts Successful Emergency Department Analgesia. J Pain. 2010 July;11(7):692-697. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2009.10.017.
5. U.S. Department of Health and Human Serves, Office of Minority Health. Infant Mortality and African Americans. 2019 Nov 8. minorityhealth.hhs.gov/omh/browse.aspx?lvl=4&lvlid=23.
6. Jacobs ZG, et al. The Association between Limited English Proficiency and Sepsis Mortality. J Hosp Med. 2020;3;140-146. Published Online First 2019 Nov 20. doi:10.12788/jhm.3334.
7. Finucane TE. Mention of a Patient’s “Race” in Clinical Presentations. Virtual Mentor. 2014;16(6):423-427. doi: 10.1001/virtualmentor.2014.16.6.ecas1-1406.
With the shootings of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, and other Black citizens setting off protests and unrest, race was at the forefront of national conversation in the United States – along with COVID-19 – over the past year.
“We’ve heard things like, ‘We’re in a post-racial society,’ but I think 2020 in particular has emphasized that we’re not,” said Gregory Johnson, MD, SFHM, chief medical officer of hospital medicine at Sound Physicians, a national physician practice. “Racism is very present in our lives, it’s very present in our world, and it is absolutely present in medicine.”
Yes, race is still an issue in the U.S. as we head into 2021, though this may have come as something of a surprise to people who do not live with racism daily.
“If you have a brain, you have bias, and that bias will likely apply to race as well,” Dr. Johnson said. “When we’re talking about institutional racism, the educational system and the media have led us to create presumptions and prejudices that we don’t necessarily recognize off the top because they’ve just been a part of the fabric of who we are as we’ve grown up.”
The term “racism” has extremely negative connotations because there’s character judgment attached to it, but to say someone is racist or racially insensitive does not equate them with being a Klansman, said Dr. Johnson. “I think we as people have to acknowledge that, yes, it’s possible for me to be racist and I might not be 100% aware of it. It’s being open to the possibility – or rather probability – that you are and then taking steps to figure out how you can address that, so you can limit it. And that requires constant self-evaluation and work,” he said.
Racism in the medical environment
Institutional racism is evident before students are even accepted into medical school, said Areeba Kara, MD, SFHM, associate professor of clinical medicine at Indiana University, Indianapolis, and a hospitalist at IU Health Physicians.
Mean MCAT scores are lower for applicants traditionally underrepresented in medicine (UIM) compared to the scores of well-represented groups.1 “Lower scores are associated with lower acceptance rates into medical school,” Dr. Kara said. “These differences reflect unequal educational opportunities rooted in centuries of legal discrimination.”
Racism is apparent in both the hidden medical education curriculum and in lessons implicitly taught to students, said Ndidi Unaka, MD, MEd, associate program director of the pediatric residency training program at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital.
“These lessons inform the way in which we as physicians see our patients, each other, and how we practice,” she said. “We reinforce race-based medicine and shape clinical decision making through flawed guidelines and practices, which exacerbates health inequities. We teach that race – rather than racism – is a risk factor for poor health outcomes. Our students and trainees watch as we assume the worst of our patients from marginalized communities of color.”
Terms describing patients of color, such as “difficult,” “non-compliant,” or “frequent flyer” are thrown around and sometimes, instead of finding out why, “we view these states of being as static, root causes for poor outcomes rather than symptoms of social conditions and obstacles that impact overall health and wellbeing,” Dr. Unaka said.
Leadership opportunities
Though hospital medicine is a growing field, Dr. Kara noted that the 2020 State of Hospital Medicine Report found that only 5.5% of hospital medical group leaders were Black, and just 2.2% were Hispanic/Latino.2 “I think these numbers speak for themselves,” she said.
Dr. Unaka said that the lack of UIM hospitalists and physician leaders creates fewer opportunities for “race-concordant mentorship relationships.” It also forces UIM physicians to shoulder more responsibilities – often obligations that do little to help them move forward in their careers – all in the name of diversity. And when UIM physicians are given leadership opportunities, Dr. Unaka said they are often unsure as to whether their appointments are genuine or just a hollow gesture made for the sake of diversity.
Dr. Johnson pointed out that Black and Latinx populations primarily get their care from hospital-based specialties, yet this is not reflected in the number of UIM practitioners in leadership roles. He said race and ethnicity, as well as gender, need to be factors when individuals are evaluated for leadership opportunities – for the individual’s sake, as well as for the community he or she is serving.
“When we can evaluate for unconscious bias and factor in that diverse groups tend to have better outcomes, whether it’s business or clinical outcomes, it’s one of the opportunities that we collectively have in the specialty to improve what we’re delivering for hospitals and, more importantly, for patients,” he said.
Relationships with colleagues and patients
Racism creeps into interactions and relationships with others as well, whether it’s between clinicians, clinician to patient, or patient to clinician. Sometimes it’s blatant; often it’s subtle.
A common, recurring example Dr. Unaka has experienced in the clinician to clinician relationship is being confused for other Black physicians, making her feel invisible. “The everyday verbal, nonverbal, and environmental slights, snubs, or insults from colleagues are frequent and contribute to feelings of exclusion, isolation, and exhaustion,” she said. Despite this, she is still expected to “address microaggressions and other forms of interpersonal racism and find ways to move through professional spaces in spite of the trauma, fear, and stress associated with my reality and lived experiences.” She said that clinicians who remain silent on the topic of racism participate in the violence and contribute to the disillusionment of UIM physicians.
Dr. Kara said that the discrimination from the health care team is the hardest to deal with. In the clinician to clinician relationship, there is a sense among UIM physicians that they’re being watched more closely and “have to prove themselves at every single turn.” Unfortunately, this comes from the environment, which tends to be adversarial rather than supportive and nurturing, she said.
“There are lots of opportunities for racism or racial insensitivity to crop up from clinician to clinician,” said Dr. Johnson. When he started his career as a physician after his training, Dr. Johnson was informed that his colleagues were watching him because they were not sure about his clinical skills. The fact that he was a former chief resident and board certified in two specialties did not seem to make any difference.
Patients refusing care from UIM physicians or expressing disapproval – both verbal and nonverbal – of such care, happens all too often. “It’s easier for me to excuse patients and their families as we often meet them on their worst days,” said Dr. Kara. Still, “understanding my oath to care for people and do no harm, but at the same time, recognizing that this is an individual that is rejecting my care without having any idea of who I am as a physician is frustrating,” Dr. Johnson acknowledged.
Then there’s the complex clinician to patient relationship, which research clearly shows contributes to health disparities.3 For one thing, the physician workforce does not reflect the patient population, Dr. Unaka said. “We cannot ignore the lack of race concordance between patients and clinicians, nor can the continued misplacement of blame for medical mistrust be at the feet of our patients,” she said.
Dr. Unaka feels that clinicians need to accept both that health inequities exist and that frontline physicians themselves contribute to the inequities. “Our diagnostic and therapeutic decisions are not immune to bias and are influenced by our deeply held beliefs about specific populations,” she said. “And the health care system that our patients navigate is no different than other systems, settings, and environments that are marred by racism in all its forms.”
Systemic racism greatly impacts patient care, said Dr. Kara. She pointed to several examples: Research showing that race concordance between patients and providers in an emergency department setting led to better pain control with fewer analgesics.4 The high maternal and infant mortality rates amongst Black women and children.5 Evidence of poorer outcomes in sepsis patients with limited English proficiency.6 “There are plenty more,” she said. “We need to be asking ourselves what we are going to do about it.”
Moving forward
That racial biases are steeped so thoroughly into our culture and consciousness means that moving beyond them is a continual, purposeful work in progress. But it is work that is critical for everyone, and certainly necessary for those who care for their fellow human beings when they are in a vulnerable state.
Health care systems need to move toward equity – giving everyone what they need to thrive – rather than focusing on equality – giving everyone the same thing, said Jenny Baenziger, MD, assistant professor of clinical medicine and pediatrics at Indiana University, Indianapolis, and associate director of education at IU Center for Global Health. “We know that minoritized patients are going to need more attention, more advocacy, more sensitivity, and more creative solutions in order to help them achieve health in a world that is often stacked against them,” she said.
“The unique needs of each patient, family unit, and/or population must be taken into consideration,” said Dr. Unaka. She said hospitalists need to embrace creative approaches that can better serve the specific needs of patients. Equitable practices should be the default, which means data transparency, thoroughly dissecting hospital processes to find existing inequities, giving stakeholders – especially patients and families of color – a voice, and tearing down oppressive systems that contribute to poor health outcomes and oppression, she said.
“It’s time for us to talk about racism openly,” said Dr. Kara. “Believe your colleagues when they share their fears and treat each other with respect. We should be actively learning about and celebrating our diversity.” She encourages finding out what your institution is doing on this front and getting involved.
Dr. Johnson believes that first and foremost, hospitalists need to be exposed to the data on health care disparities. “The next step is asking what we as hospitalists, or any other specialty, can do to intervene and improve in those areas,” he said. Focusing on unconscious bias training is important, he said, so clinicians can see what biases they might be bringing into the hospital and to the bedside. Maintaining a diverse workforce and bringing UIM physicians into leadership roles to encourage diversity of ideas and approaches are also critical to promoting equity, he said.
“You cannot fix what you cannot face,” said Dr. Unaka. Education on how racism impacts patients and colleagues is essential, she believes, as is advocacy for changing inequitable health system policies. She recommends expanding social and professional circles. “Diverse social groups allow us to consider the perspectives of others; diverse professional groups allow us to ask better research questions and practice better medicine.”
Start by developing the ability to question personal assumptions and pinpoint implicit biases, suggested Dr. Baenziger. “Asking for feedback can be scary and difficult, but we should take a deep breath and do it anyway,” she said. “Simply ask your team, ‘I’ve been thinking a lot about racial equity and disparities. How can I do better at my interactions with people of color? What are my blind spots?’” Dr. Baenziger said that “to help us remember how beautifully complicated and diverse people are,” all health care professionals need to watch Nigerian novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s TED talk “The Danger of a Single Story.”
Dr. Baenziger also stressed the importance of conversations about “places where race is built into our clinical assessments, like eGFR,” as well as being aware that many of the research studies that are used to support everyday clinical decisions didn’t include people of color. She also encouraged clinicians to consider how and when they include race in their notes.7 “Is it really helpful to make sure people know right away that you are treating a ‘46-year-old Hispanic male’ or can the fact that he is Hispanic be saved for the social history section with other important details of his life such as being a father, veteran, and mechanic?” she asked.
“Racism is real and very much a part of our history. We can no longer be in denial regarding the racism that exists in medicine and the impact it has on our patients,” Dr. Unaka said. “As a profession, we cannot hide behind our espoused core values. We must live up to them.”
References
1. Lucey CR, Saguil, A. The Consequences of Structural Racism on MCAT Scores and Medical School Admissions: The Past Is Prologue. Acad Med. 2020 Mar;95(3):351-356. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002939.
2. Flores L. Increasing racial diversity in hospital medicine’s leadership ranks. The Hospitalist. 2020 Oct 21.
3. Smedley BD, et al, eds. Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care. Institute of Medicine Committee on Understanding and Eliminating Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care. Washington: National Academies Press; 2003.
4. Heins A, et al. Physician Race/Ethnicity Predicts Successful Emergency Department Analgesia. J Pain. 2010 July;11(7):692-697. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2009.10.017.
5. U.S. Department of Health and Human Serves, Office of Minority Health. Infant Mortality and African Americans. 2019 Nov 8. minorityhealth.hhs.gov/omh/browse.aspx?lvl=4&lvlid=23.
6. Jacobs ZG, et al. The Association between Limited English Proficiency and Sepsis Mortality. J Hosp Med. 2020;3;140-146. Published Online First 2019 Nov 20. doi:10.12788/jhm.3334.
7. Finucane TE. Mention of a Patient’s “Race” in Clinical Presentations. Virtual Mentor. 2014;16(6):423-427. doi: 10.1001/virtualmentor.2014.16.6.ecas1-1406.
With the shootings of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, and other Black citizens setting off protests and unrest, race was at the forefront of national conversation in the United States – along with COVID-19 – over the past year.
“We’ve heard things like, ‘We’re in a post-racial society,’ but I think 2020 in particular has emphasized that we’re not,” said Gregory Johnson, MD, SFHM, chief medical officer of hospital medicine at Sound Physicians, a national physician practice. “Racism is very present in our lives, it’s very present in our world, and it is absolutely present in medicine.”
Yes, race is still an issue in the U.S. as we head into 2021, though this may have come as something of a surprise to people who do not live with racism daily.
“If you have a brain, you have bias, and that bias will likely apply to race as well,” Dr. Johnson said. “When we’re talking about institutional racism, the educational system and the media have led us to create presumptions and prejudices that we don’t necessarily recognize off the top because they’ve just been a part of the fabric of who we are as we’ve grown up.”
The term “racism” has extremely negative connotations because there’s character judgment attached to it, but to say someone is racist or racially insensitive does not equate them with being a Klansman, said Dr. Johnson. “I think we as people have to acknowledge that, yes, it’s possible for me to be racist and I might not be 100% aware of it. It’s being open to the possibility – or rather probability – that you are and then taking steps to figure out how you can address that, so you can limit it. And that requires constant self-evaluation and work,” he said.
Racism in the medical environment
Institutional racism is evident before students are even accepted into medical school, said Areeba Kara, MD, SFHM, associate professor of clinical medicine at Indiana University, Indianapolis, and a hospitalist at IU Health Physicians.
Mean MCAT scores are lower for applicants traditionally underrepresented in medicine (UIM) compared to the scores of well-represented groups.1 “Lower scores are associated with lower acceptance rates into medical school,” Dr. Kara said. “These differences reflect unequal educational opportunities rooted in centuries of legal discrimination.”
Racism is apparent in both the hidden medical education curriculum and in lessons implicitly taught to students, said Ndidi Unaka, MD, MEd, associate program director of the pediatric residency training program at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital.
“These lessons inform the way in which we as physicians see our patients, each other, and how we practice,” she said. “We reinforce race-based medicine and shape clinical decision making through flawed guidelines and practices, which exacerbates health inequities. We teach that race – rather than racism – is a risk factor for poor health outcomes. Our students and trainees watch as we assume the worst of our patients from marginalized communities of color.”
Terms describing patients of color, such as “difficult,” “non-compliant,” or “frequent flyer” are thrown around and sometimes, instead of finding out why, “we view these states of being as static, root causes for poor outcomes rather than symptoms of social conditions and obstacles that impact overall health and wellbeing,” Dr. Unaka said.
Leadership opportunities
Though hospital medicine is a growing field, Dr. Kara noted that the 2020 State of Hospital Medicine Report found that only 5.5% of hospital medical group leaders were Black, and just 2.2% were Hispanic/Latino.2 “I think these numbers speak for themselves,” she said.
Dr. Unaka said that the lack of UIM hospitalists and physician leaders creates fewer opportunities for “race-concordant mentorship relationships.” It also forces UIM physicians to shoulder more responsibilities – often obligations that do little to help them move forward in their careers – all in the name of diversity. And when UIM physicians are given leadership opportunities, Dr. Unaka said they are often unsure as to whether their appointments are genuine or just a hollow gesture made for the sake of diversity.
Dr. Johnson pointed out that Black and Latinx populations primarily get their care from hospital-based specialties, yet this is not reflected in the number of UIM practitioners in leadership roles. He said race and ethnicity, as well as gender, need to be factors when individuals are evaluated for leadership opportunities – for the individual’s sake, as well as for the community he or she is serving.
“When we can evaluate for unconscious bias and factor in that diverse groups tend to have better outcomes, whether it’s business or clinical outcomes, it’s one of the opportunities that we collectively have in the specialty to improve what we’re delivering for hospitals and, more importantly, for patients,” he said.
Relationships with colleagues and patients
Racism creeps into interactions and relationships with others as well, whether it’s between clinicians, clinician to patient, or patient to clinician. Sometimes it’s blatant; often it’s subtle.
A common, recurring example Dr. Unaka has experienced in the clinician to clinician relationship is being confused for other Black physicians, making her feel invisible. “The everyday verbal, nonverbal, and environmental slights, snubs, or insults from colleagues are frequent and contribute to feelings of exclusion, isolation, and exhaustion,” she said. Despite this, she is still expected to “address microaggressions and other forms of interpersonal racism and find ways to move through professional spaces in spite of the trauma, fear, and stress associated with my reality and lived experiences.” She said that clinicians who remain silent on the topic of racism participate in the violence and contribute to the disillusionment of UIM physicians.
Dr. Kara said that the discrimination from the health care team is the hardest to deal with. In the clinician to clinician relationship, there is a sense among UIM physicians that they’re being watched more closely and “have to prove themselves at every single turn.” Unfortunately, this comes from the environment, which tends to be adversarial rather than supportive and nurturing, she said.
“There are lots of opportunities for racism or racial insensitivity to crop up from clinician to clinician,” said Dr. Johnson. When he started his career as a physician after his training, Dr. Johnson was informed that his colleagues were watching him because they were not sure about his clinical skills. The fact that he was a former chief resident and board certified in two specialties did not seem to make any difference.
Patients refusing care from UIM physicians or expressing disapproval – both verbal and nonverbal – of such care, happens all too often. “It’s easier for me to excuse patients and their families as we often meet them on their worst days,” said Dr. Kara. Still, “understanding my oath to care for people and do no harm, but at the same time, recognizing that this is an individual that is rejecting my care without having any idea of who I am as a physician is frustrating,” Dr. Johnson acknowledged.
Then there’s the complex clinician to patient relationship, which research clearly shows contributes to health disparities.3 For one thing, the physician workforce does not reflect the patient population, Dr. Unaka said. “We cannot ignore the lack of race concordance between patients and clinicians, nor can the continued misplacement of blame for medical mistrust be at the feet of our patients,” she said.
Dr. Unaka feels that clinicians need to accept both that health inequities exist and that frontline physicians themselves contribute to the inequities. “Our diagnostic and therapeutic decisions are not immune to bias and are influenced by our deeply held beliefs about specific populations,” she said. “And the health care system that our patients navigate is no different than other systems, settings, and environments that are marred by racism in all its forms.”
Systemic racism greatly impacts patient care, said Dr. Kara. She pointed to several examples: Research showing that race concordance between patients and providers in an emergency department setting led to better pain control with fewer analgesics.4 The high maternal and infant mortality rates amongst Black women and children.5 Evidence of poorer outcomes in sepsis patients with limited English proficiency.6 “There are plenty more,” she said. “We need to be asking ourselves what we are going to do about it.”
Moving forward
That racial biases are steeped so thoroughly into our culture and consciousness means that moving beyond them is a continual, purposeful work in progress. But it is work that is critical for everyone, and certainly necessary for those who care for their fellow human beings when they are in a vulnerable state.
Health care systems need to move toward equity – giving everyone what they need to thrive – rather than focusing on equality – giving everyone the same thing, said Jenny Baenziger, MD, assistant professor of clinical medicine and pediatrics at Indiana University, Indianapolis, and associate director of education at IU Center for Global Health. “We know that minoritized patients are going to need more attention, more advocacy, more sensitivity, and more creative solutions in order to help them achieve health in a world that is often stacked against them,” she said.
“The unique needs of each patient, family unit, and/or population must be taken into consideration,” said Dr. Unaka. She said hospitalists need to embrace creative approaches that can better serve the specific needs of patients. Equitable practices should be the default, which means data transparency, thoroughly dissecting hospital processes to find existing inequities, giving stakeholders – especially patients and families of color – a voice, and tearing down oppressive systems that contribute to poor health outcomes and oppression, she said.
“It’s time for us to talk about racism openly,” said Dr. Kara. “Believe your colleagues when they share their fears and treat each other with respect. We should be actively learning about and celebrating our diversity.” She encourages finding out what your institution is doing on this front and getting involved.
Dr. Johnson believes that first and foremost, hospitalists need to be exposed to the data on health care disparities. “The next step is asking what we as hospitalists, or any other specialty, can do to intervene and improve in those areas,” he said. Focusing on unconscious bias training is important, he said, so clinicians can see what biases they might be bringing into the hospital and to the bedside. Maintaining a diverse workforce and bringing UIM physicians into leadership roles to encourage diversity of ideas and approaches are also critical to promoting equity, he said.
“You cannot fix what you cannot face,” said Dr. Unaka. Education on how racism impacts patients and colleagues is essential, she believes, as is advocacy for changing inequitable health system policies. She recommends expanding social and professional circles. “Diverse social groups allow us to consider the perspectives of others; diverse professional groups allow us to ask better research questions and practice better medicine.”
Start by developing the ability to question personal assumptions and pinpoint implicit biases, suggested Dr. Baenziger. “Asking for feedback can be scary and difficult, but we should take a deep breath and do it anyway,” she said. “Simply ask your team, ‘I’ve been thinking a lot about racial equity and disparities. How can I do better at my interactions with people of color? What are my blind spots?’” Dr. Baenziger said that “to help us remember how beautifully complicated and diverse people are,” all health care professionals need to watch Nigerian novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s TED talk “The Danger of a Single Story.”
Dr. Baenziger also stressed the importance of conversations about “places where race is built into our clinical assessments, like eGFR,” as well as being aware that many of the research studies that are used to support everyday clinical decisions didn’t include people of color. She also encouraged clinicians to consider how and when they include race in their notes.7 “Is it really helpful to make sure people know right away that you are treating a ‘46-year-old Hispanic male’ or can the fact that he is Hispanic be saved for the social history section with other important details of his life such as being a father, veteran, and mechanic?” she asked.
“Racism is real and very much a part of our history. We can no longer be in denial regarding the racism that exists in medicine and the impact it has on our patients,” Dr. Unaka said. “As a profession, we cannot hide behind our espoused core values. We must live up to them.”
References
1. Lucey CR, Saguil, A. The Consequences of Structural Racism on MCAT Scores and Medical School Admissions: The Past Is Prologue. Acad Med. 2020 Mar;95(3):351-356. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002939.
2. Flores L. Increasing racial diversity in hospital medicine’s leadership ranks. The Hospitalist. 2020 Oct 21.
3. Smedley BD, et al, eds. Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care. Institute of Medicine Committee on Understanding and Eliminating Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care. Washington: National Academies Press; 2003.
4. Heins A, et al. Physician Race/Ethnicity Predicts Successful Emergency Department Analgesia. J Pain. 2010 July;11(7):692-697. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2009.10.017.
5. U.S. Department of Health and Human Serves, Office of Minority Health. Infant Mortality and African Americans. 2019 Nov 8. minorityhealth.hhs.gov/omh/browse.aspx?lvl=4&lvlid=23.
6. Jacobs ZG, et al. The Association between Limited English Proficiency and Sepsis Mortality. J Hosp Med. 2020;3;140-146. Published Online First 2019 Nov 20. doi:10.12788/jhm.3334.
7. Finucane TE. Mention of a Patient’s “Race” in Clinical Presentations. Virtual Mentor. 2014;16(6):423-427. doi: 10.1001/virtualmentor.2014.16.6.ecas1-1406.
Hospital volumes start to fall again, even as COVID-19 soars
Hospital volumes, which had largely recovered in September after crashing last spring, are dropping again, according to new data from Strata Decision Technologies, a Chicago-based analytics firm.
For the 2 weeks that ended Nov. 28, inpatient admissions were 6.2% below what they’d been on Nov. 14 and 2.1% below what they’d been on Oct. 28. Compared with the same intervals in 2019, admissions were off 4.4% for the 14-day period and 3.7% for the 30-day period.
Although those aren’t large percentages, Strata’s report, based on data from about 275 client hospitals, notes that what kept the volumes up was the increasing number of COVID-19 cases. If COVID-19 cases are not considered, admissions would have been down “double digits,” said Steve Lefar, executive director of StrataDataScience, a division of Strata Decision Technologies, in an interview with this news organization.
“Hip and knee replacements, cardiac procedures, and other procedures are significantly down year over year. Infectious disease cases, in contrast, have skyrocketed,” Mr. Lefar said. “Many things went way down that hadn’t fully recovered. It’s COVID-19 that really brought the volume back up.”
Observation and emergency department visits also dropped from already low levels. For the 2 weeks that ended Nov. 28, observation visits were off 8.4%; for the previous month, 10.1%. Compared with 2019, they were down 22.3% and 18.6%, respectively.
ED visits fell 3.7% for the 2-week period, 0.6% for the month. They dropped 21% and 18.7%, respectively, compared with those periods from the previous year.
What these data reflect, Mr. Lefar said, is that people have avoided EDs and are staying away from them more than ever because of COVID-19 fears. This behavior could be problematic for people who have concerning symptoms, such as chest pains, that should be evaluated by an ED physician, he noted.
Daily outpatient visits were down 18.4% for the 14-day period and 9.3% for the 30-day period. But, compared with 2019, ambulatory visits increased 5.8% for the 2-week period and 4.7% for the previous month.
Long-term trends
The outpatient visit data should be viewed in the context of the overall trend since the pandemic began. Strata broke down service lines for the period between March 20 and Nov. 7. The analysis shows that evaluation and management (E/M) encounters, the largest outpatient visit category, fell 58% during this period, compared with the same interval in 2019. Visits for diabetes, hypertension, and minor acute infections and injuries were also way down.
Mr. Lefar observed that the E/M visit category was only for in-person visits, which many patients have ditched in favor of telehealth encounters. At the same time, he noted, “people are going in less for chronic disease visits. So there’s an interplay between less in-person visits, more telehealth, and maybe people going to other sites that aren’t on the hospital campus. But people are going less [to outpatient clinics].”
In the year-to-year comparison, volume was down substantially in other service lines, including cancer (–9.2%), cardiology (–20%), dermatology (–31%), endocrine (–18.8%), ENT (–42.5%), gastroenterology (–24.3%), nephrology (–15%), obstetrics (–15.6%), orthopedics (–28.2%), and general surgery (–22.2%). Major procedures decreased by 21.8%.
In contrast, the infectious disease category jumped 86% over 2019, and “other infectious and parasitic diseases” – i.e., COVID-19 – soared 222%.
There was a much bigger crash in admissions, observation visits, and ED visits last spring than in November, the report shows. “What happened nationally last spring is that everyone shut down,” Mr. Lefar explained. “All the electives were canceled. Even cancer surgery was shut down, along with many other procedures. That’s what drove that crash. But the provider community quickly learned that this is going to be a long haul, and we’re going to have to reopen. We’re going to do it safely, but we’re going to make sure people get the necessary care. We can’t put off cancer care or colonoscopies and other screenings that save lives.”
System starts to break down
The current wave of COVID-19, however, is beginning to change the definition of necessary care, he said. “Hospitals are reaching the breaking point between staff exhaustion and hospital capacity reaching its limit. In Texas, hospitals are starting to shut down certain essential non-COVID care. They’re turning away some nonurgent cases – the electives that were starting to come back.”
How about nonurgent COVID cases? Mr. Lefar said there’s evidence that some of those patients are also being diverted. “Some experts speculate that the turn-away rate of people with confirmed COVID is starting to go up, and hospitals are sending them home with oxygen or an oxygen meter and saying, ‘If it gets worse, come back.’ They just don’t have the critical care capacity – and that should scare the heck out of everybody.”
Strata doesn’t yet have the data to confirm this, he said, “but it appears that some people are being sent home. This may be partly because providers are better at telling which patients are acute, and there are better things they can send them home with. It’s not necessarily worse care, but we don’t know. But we’re definitely seeing a higher send-home rate of patients showing up with COVID.”
Hospital profit margins are cratering again, because the COVID-19 cases aren’t generating nearly as much profit as the lucrative procedures that, in many cases, have been put off, Mr. Lefar said. “Even though CMS is paying 20% more for verified COVID-19 patients, we know that the costs on these patients are much higher than expected, so they’re not making much money on these cases.”
For about a third of hospitals, margins are currently negative, he said. That is about the same percentage as in September. In April, 60% of health systems were losing money, he added. “The CARES Act saved some of them,” he noted.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Hospital volumes, which had largely recovered in September after crashing last spring, are dropping again, according to new data from Strata Decision Technologies, a Chicago-based analytics firm.
For the 2 weeks that ended Nov. 28, inpatient admissions were 6.2% below what they’d been on Nov. 14 and 2.1% below what they’d been on Oct. 28. Compared with the same intervals in 2019, admissions were off 4.4% for the 14-day period and 3.7% for the 30-day period.
Although those aren’t large percentages, Strata’s report, based on data from about 275 client hospitals, notes that what kept the volumes up was the increasing number of COVID-19 cases. If COVID-19 cases are not considered, admissions would have been down “double digits,” said Steve Lefar, executive director of StrataDataScience, a division of Strata Decision Technologies, in an interview with this news organization.
“Hip and knee replacements, cardiac procedures, and other procedures are significantly down year over year. Infectious disease cases, in contrast, have skyrocketed,” Mr. Lefar said. “Many things went way down that hadn’t fully recovered. It’s COVID-19 that really brought the volume back up.”
Observation and emergency department visits also dropped from already low levels. For the 2 weeks that ended Nov. 28, observation visits were off 8.4%; for the previous month, 10.1%. Compared with 2019, they were down 22.3% and 18.6%, respectively.
ED visits fell 3.7% for the 2-week period, 0.6% for the month. They dropped 21% and 18.7%, respectively, compared with those periods from the previous year.
What these data reflect, Mr. Lefar said, is that people have avoided EDs and are staying away from them more than ever because of COVID-19 fears. This behavior could be problematic for people who have concerning symptoms, such as chest pains, that should be evaluated by an ED physician, he noted.
Daily outpatient visits were down 18.4% for the 14-day period and 9.3% for the 30-day period. But, compared with 2019, ambulatory visits increased 5.8% for the 2-week period and 4.7% for the previous month.
Long-term trends
The outpatient visit data should be viewed in the context of the overall trend since the pandemic began. Strata broke down service lines for the period between March 20 and Nov. 7. The analysis shows that evaluation and management (E/M) encounters, the largest outpatient visit category, fell 58% during this period, compared with the same interval in 2019. Visits for diabetes, hypertension, and minor acute infections and injuries were also way down.
Mr. Lefar observed that the E/M visit category was only for in-person visits, which many patients have ditched in favor of telehealth encounters. At the same time, he noted, “people are going in less for chronic disease visits. So there’s an interplay between less in-person visits, more telehealth, and maybe people going to other sites that aren’t on the hospital campus. But people are going less [to outpatient clinics].”
In the year-to-year comparison, volume was down substantially in other service lines, including cancer (–9.2%), cardiology (–20%), dermatology (–31%), endocrine (–18.8%), ENT (–42.5%), gastroenterology (–24.3%), nephrology (–15%), obstetrics (–15.6%), orthopedics (–28.2%), and general surgery (–22.2%). Major procedures decreased by 21.8%.
In contrast, the infectious disease category jumped 86% over 2019, and “other infectious and parasitic diseases” – i.e., COVID-19 – soared 222%.
There was a much bigger crash in admissions, observation visits, and ED visits last spring than in November, the report shows. “What happened nationally last spring is that everyone shut down,” Mr. Lefar explained. “All the electives were canceled. Even cancer surgery was shut down, along with many other procedures. That’s what drove that crash. But the provider community quickly learned that this is going to be a long haul, and we’re going to have to reopen. We’re going to do it safely, but we’re going to make sure people get the necessary care. We can’t put off cancer care or colonoscopies and other screenings that save lives.”
System starts to break down
The current wave of COVID-19, however, is beginning to change the definition of necessary care, he said. “Hospitals are reaching the breaking point between staff exhaustion and hospital capacity reaching its limit. In Texas, hospitals are starting to shut down certain essential non-COVID care. They’re turning away some nonurgent cases – the electives that were starting to come back.”
How about nonurgent COVID cases? Mr. Lefar said there’s evidence that some of those patients are also being diverted. “Some experts speculate that the turn-away rate of people with confirmed COVID is starting to go up, and hospitals are sending them home with oxygen or an oxygen meter and saying, ‘If it gets worse, come back.’ They just don’t have the critical care capacity – and that should scare the heck out of everybody.”
Strata doesn’t yet have the data to confirm this, he said, “but it appears that some people are being sent home. This may be partly because providers are better at telling which patients are acute, and there are better things they can send them home with. It’s not necessarily worse care, but we don’t know. But we’re definitely seeing a higher send-home rate of patients showing up with COVID.”
Hospital profit margins are cratering again, because the COVID-19 cases aren’t generating nearly as much profit as the lucrative procedures that, in many cases, have been put off, Mr. Lefar said. “Even though CMS is paying 20% more for verified COVID-19 patients, we know that the costs on these patients are much higher than expected, so they’re not making much money on these cases.”
For about a third of hospitals, margins are currently negative, he said. That is about the same percentage as in September. In April, 60% of health systems were losing money, he added. “The CARES Act saved some of them,” he noted.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Hospital volumes, which had largely recovered in September after crashing last spring, are dropping again, according to new data from Strata Decision Technologies, a Chicago-based analytics firm.
For the 2 weeks that ended Nov. 28, inpatient admissions were 6.2% below what they’d been on Nov. 14 and 2.1% below what they’d been on Oct. 28. Compared with the same intervals in 2019, admissions were off 4.4% for the 14-day period and 3.7% for the 30-day period.
Although those aren’t large percentages, Strata’s report, based on data from about 275 client hospitals, notes that what kept the volumes up was the increasing number of COVID-19 cases. If COVID-19 cases are not considered, admissions would have been down “double digits,” said Steve Lefar, executive director of StrataDataScience, a division of Strata Decision Technologies, in an interview with this news organization.
“Hip and knee replacements, cardiac procedures, and other procedures are significantly down year over year. Infectious disease cases, in contrast, have skyrocketed,” Mr. Lefar said. “Many things went way down that hadn’t fully recovered. It’s COVID-19 that really brought the volume back up.”
Observation and emergency department visits also dropped from already low levels. For the 2 weeks that ended Nov. 28, observation visits were off 8.4%; for the previous month, 10.1%. Compared with 2019, they were down 22.3% and 18.6%, respectively.
ED visits fell 3.7% for the 2-week period, 0.6% for the month. They dropped 21% and 18.7%, respectively, compared with those periods from the previous year.
What these data reflect, Mr. Lefar said, is that people have avoided EDs and are staying away from them more than ever because of COVID-19 fears. This behavior could be problematic for people who have concerning symptoms, such as chest pains, that should be evaluated by an ED physician, he noted.
Daily outpatient visits were down 18.4% for the 14-day period and 9.3% for the 30-day period. But, compared with 2019, ambulatory visits increased 5.8% for the 2-week period and 4.7% for the previous month.
Long-term trends
The outpatient visit data should be viewed in the context of the overall trend since the pandemic began. Strata broke down service lines for the period between March 20 and Nov. 7. The analysis shows that evaluation and management (E/M) encounters, the largest outpatient visit category, fell 58% during this period, compared with the same interval in 2019. Visits for diabetes, hypertension, and minor acute infections and injuries were also way down.
Mr. Lefar observed that the E/M visit category was only for in-person visits, which many patients have ditched in favor of telehealth encounters. At the same time, he noted, “people are going in less for chronic disease visits. So there’s an interplay between less in-person visits, more telehealth, and maybe people going to other sites that aren’t on the hospital campus. But people are going less [to outpatient clinics].”
In the year-to-year comparison, volume was down substantially in other service lines, including cancer (–9.2%), cardiology (–20%), dermatology (–31%), endocrine (–18.8%), ENT (–42.5%), gastroenterology (–24.3%), nephrology (–15%), obstetrics (–15.6%), orthopedics (–28.2%), and general surgery (–22.2%). Major procedures decreased by 21.8%.
In contrast, the infectious disease category jumped 86% over 2019, and “other infectious and parasitic diseases” – i.e., COVID-19 – soared 222%.
There was a much bigger crash in admissions, observation visits, and ED visits last spring than in November, the report shows. “What happened nationally last spring is that everyone shut down,” Mr. Lefar explained. “All the electives were canceled. Even cancer surgery was shut down, along with many other procedures. That’s what drove that crash. But the provider community quickly learned that this is going to be a long haul, and we’re going to have to reopen. We’re going to do it safely, but we’re going to make sure people get the necessary care. We can’t put off cancer care or colonoscopies and other screenings that save lives.”
System starts to break down
The current wave of COVID-19, however, is beginning to change the definition of necessary care, he said. “Hospitals are reaching the breaking point between staff exhaustion and hospital capacity reaching its limit. In Texas, hospitals are starting to shut down certain essential non-COVID care. They’re turning away some nonurgent cases – the electives that were starting to come back.”
How about nonurgent COVID cases? Mr. Lefar said there’s evidence that some of those patients are also being diverted. “Some experts speculate that the turn-away rate of people with confirmed COVID is starting to go up, and hospitals are sending them home with oxygen or an oxygen meter and saying, ‘If it gets worse, come back.’ They just don’t have the critical care capacity – and that should scare the heck out of everybody.”
Strata doesn’t yet have the data to confirm this, he said, “but it appears that some people are being sent home. This may be partly because providers are better at telling which patients are acute, and there are better things they can send them home with. It’s not necessarily worse care, but we don’t know. But we’re definitely seeing a higher send-home rate of patients showing up with COVID.”
Hospital profit margins are cratering again, because the COVID-19 cases aren’t generating nearly as much profit as the lucrative procedures that, in many cases, have been put off, Mr. Lefar said. “Even though CMS is paying 20% more for verified COVID-19 patients, we know that the costs on these patients are much higher than expected, so they’re not making much money on these cases.”
For about a third of hospitals, margins are currently negative, he said. That is about the same percentage as in September. In April, 60% of health systems were losing money, he added. “The CARES Act saved some of them,” he noted.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Contact tracing in hospitals falls off as COVID-19 cases rise
Like most health care workers at his hospital in Lafayette, Ind., Ramesh Adhikari, MD, FHM, occasionally gets an email noting that a patient he saw later tested positive for COVID-19. He’s reminded to self-monitor for symptoms. But 10 months into the pandemic, it has become increasingly unlikely for contact tracing investigations to result in clinicians quarantining.
The very act of working in the hospital, Dr. Adhikari said, means being likely to see COVID-19 every day, whether in a known patient or an asymptomatic person who tests positive later. If hospitalists had to quarantine after every interaction with a COVID-positive person, there wouldn’t be anyone left to do their jobs.
“It’s really hard to do [contact tracing] in health care workers thoroughly because of the way we work,” Dr. Adhikari said. “It’s impossible to do it absolutely.”
In a recently updated guidance, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention extended more leeway in contact tracing when community rates of COVID-19 surge, even allowing that contact tracing “may not be possible” in certain situations. And by defining an exposure more narrowly – health care workers are only considered “exposed” if their contact was more than 15 minutes or lacking in some form of PPE – the guidelines suggest that hospitals can rely more on universal PPE and screening protocols, as Dr. Adhikari’s hospital does, and less on extensive contact tracing to curtail viral spread.
Accordingly, while contact tracing has gotten more lax, doctors say, universal precautions – including full PPE and screening of symptoms for patients and health care workers – have become more stringent.
It’s a shift from the beginning of the pandemic. At first, CDC recommended wearing masks only during aerosol-producing procedures. Exposures were frequently reported and health care workers sent home. With more evidence in favor of stricter PPE requirements, hospitals including the one where Shyam Odeti, MD, FHM, works in Johnson City, Tenn., have adopted a universal precaution strategy – requiring masks everywhere and a gown, face shield, gloves, and N95 to enter a COVID-positive patient’s room. Thus, most exposures fall into that low-risk category.
“If I get it and am asymptomatic, I don’t think my colleagues would be exposed by any means because of these stringent policies being enforced,” said Dr. Odeti, a hospitalist who often wears a surgical mask on top of his N95 all day. “And U.S. health care is not in a state that can afford to quarantine health care workers for 14 days.”
Can universal PPE precautions supplant contact tracing?
The extent of contact tracing varies by hospital. Larger university and community hospitals often have infection control and occupational health teams that can do their own contact tracing, while smaller institutions can’t always spare staff. And some state health departments get involved with contact tracing of health care workers while others do not.
“I would venture to say that most hospitals are doing something in terms of contact tracing,” said Pam Falk, MPH, CIC, a member of the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology’s COVID-19 task force and an infection control consultant. “It kind of depends on their bandwidth.”
But there’s no longer a norm. Outside of a pandemic, with ample staffing and far fewer instances that need to be investigated, standards for contact tracing are higher, Dr. Falk said: When a patient is found to have an airborne disease such as tuberculosis, measles, mumps, or chickenpox, a hospital’s infection prevention team should investigate, confirm the diagnosis and identify everyone who was exposed. The hospital’s occupational health team assists in deciding who will likely need prophylactic treatment and if employees should be furloughed. The thoroughness of such measures has always depended on a hospital’s bandwidth.
Because PPE seems to be able to contain COVID-19 better than some of the older diseases targeted by contact tracing, universal protections may be a reasonable alternative in current circumstances, doctors said – if PPE is available.
“At the end of the day, universal source control with surgical masks – and ideally eye protection for clinicians as well – should prevent most transmissions,” said Aaron Richterman, MD, from the division of infectious diseases at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, who coauthored a JAMA commentary on decreased transmission rates in hospitals.
Contact tracing is still useful, though, to identify weaknesses in universal protection measures, he said.
“I don’t think it’s worth abandoning. It’s like a tool in the toolbox. All are imperfect, and none work 100% of the time,” Dr. Richterman said, but using all of them can achieve a fairly high measure of safety. Of the tools, universal masking likely works the best, he contends, so it should be the top pick for hospitals without resources to use all of the tools.
A recent incident at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston is a case study in how contact tracing can work together with universal protections to identify cracks in the system, said Dr. Richterman, who worked at the hospital earlier in the pandemic.
Mass General Brigham adopted a universal masking policy for staff and patients in March 2020. Then, when the system experienced an outbreak in September, the hospital did “a very detailed public evaluation that included contact tracing and universal testing,” Dr. Richterman said. Testing even included genetic analysis of the virus to confirm which cases were hospital acquired. In the end, the hospital identified weaknesses in infection control that could be rectified, such as clinicians eating too close together.
“The approach is not to point fingers, but to say: ‘What’s wrong with the system and how do we improve?’ ” Dr. Richterman said. “To ask, why did that maskless transmission happen? Is there not enough space to eat? Are people working too many hours? It’s useful for systems to understand where transmissions are happening.”
Amith Skandhan, MD, SFHM, a hospitalist in Dothan, Ala., is comfortable without much contact tracing as long as there is universal PPE use. His hospital informs clinicians of exposures, but “basically we’re trained to treat every patient as if they had COVID,” he said, so “I feel more secure in the hospital than in the community.” Masks have become so habitual they’re like part of your regular clothing, he said – you feel incomplete if you don’t have one.
While ad hoc approaches to contact tracing may be useful in the current stage of the pandemic, they are likely to be short-lived: Once a community’s positivity rate falls, the CDC’s guidance suggests how hospitals can return to full contact tracing.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Like most health care workers at his hospital in Lafayette, Ind., Ramesh Adhikari, MD, FHM, occasionally gets an email noting that a patient he saw later tested positive for COVID-19. He’s reminded to self-monitor for symptoms. But 10 months into the pandemic, it has become increasingly unlikely for contact tracing investigations to result in clinicians quarantining.
The very act of working in the hospital, Dr. Adhikari said, means being likely to see COVID-19 every day, whether in a known patient or an asymptomatic person who tests positive later. If hospitalists had to quarantine after every interaction with a COVID-positive person, there wouldn’t be anyone left to do their jobs.
“It’s really hard to do [contact tracing] in health care workers thoroughly because of the way we work,” Dr. Adhikari said. “It’s impossible to do it absolutely.”
In a recently updated guidance, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention extended more leeway in contact tracing when community rates of COVID-19 surge, even allowing that contact tracing “may not be possible” in certain situations. And by defining an exposure more narrowly – health care workers are only considered “exposed” if their contact was more than 15 minutes or lacking in some form of PPE – the guidelines suggest that hospitals can rely more on universal PPE and screening protocols, as Dr. Adhikari’s hospital does, and less on extensive contact tracing to curtail viral spread.
Accordingly, while contact tracing has gotten more lax, doctors say, universal precautions – including full PPE and screening of symptoms for patients and health care workers – have become more stringent.
It’s a shift from the beginning of the pandemic. At first, CDC recommended wearing masks only during aerosol-producing procedures. Exposures were frequently reported and health care workers sent home. With more evidence in favor of stricter PPE requirements, hospitals including the one where Shyam Odeti, MD, FHM, works in Johnson City, Tenn., have adopted a universal precaution strategy – requiring masks everywhere and a gown, face shield, gloves, and N95 to enter a COVID-positive patient’s room. Thus, most exposures fall into that low-risk category.
“If I get it and am asymptomatic, I don’t think my colleagues would be exposed by any means because of these stringent policies being enforced,” said Dr. Odeti, a hospitalist who often wears a surgical mask on top of his N95 all day. “And U.S. health care is not in a state that can afford to quarantine health care workers for 14 days.”
Can universal PPE precautions supplant contact tracing?
The extent of contact tracing varies by hospital. Larger university and community hospitals often have infection control and occupational health teams that can do their own contact tracing, while smaller institutions can’t always spare staff. And some state health departments get involved with contact tracing of health care workers while others do not.
“I would venture to say that most hospitals are doing something in terms of contact tracing,” said Pam Falk, MPH, CIC, a member of the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology’s COVID-19 task force and an infection control consultant. “It kind of depends on their bandwidth.”
But there’s no longer a norm. Outside of a pandemic, with ample staffing and far fewer instances that need to be investigated, standards for contact tracing are higher, Dr. Falk said: When a patient is found to have an airborne disease such as tuberculosis, measles, mumps, or chickenpox, a hospital’s infection prevention team should investigate, confirm the diagnosis and identify everyone who was exposed. The hospital’s occupational health team assists in deciding who will likely need prophylactic treatment and if employees should be furloughed. The thoroughness of such measures has always depended on a hospital’s bandwidth.
Because PPE seems to be able to contain COVID-19 better than some of the older diseases targeted by contact tracing, universal protections may be a reasonable alternative in current circumstances, doctors said – if PPE is available.
“At the end of the day, universal source control with surgical masks – and ideally eye protection for clinicians as well – should prevent most transmissions,” said Aaron Richterman, MD, from the division of infectious diseases at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, who coauthored a JAMA commentary on decreased transmission rates in hospitals.
Contact tracing is still useful, though, to identify weaknesses in universal protection measures, he said.
“I don’t think it’s worth abandoning. It’s like a tool in the toolbox. All are imperfect, and none work 100% of the time,” Dr. Richterman said, but using all of them can achieve a fairly high measure of safety. Of the tools, universal masking likely works the best, he contends, so it should be the top pick for hospitals without resources to use all of the tools.
A recent incident at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston is a case study in how contact tracing can work together with universal protections to identify cracks in the system, said Dr. Richterman, who worked at the hospital earlier in the pandemic.
Mass General Brigham adopted a universal masking policy for staff and patients in March 2020. Then, when the system experienced an outbreak in September, the hospital did “a very detailed public evaluation that included contact tracing and universal testing,” Dr. Richterman said. Testing even included genetic analysis of the virus to confirm which cases were hospital acquired. In the end, the hospital identified weaknesses in infection control that could be rectified, such as clinicians eating too close together.
“The approach is not to point fingers, but to say: ‘What’s wrong with the system and how do we improve?’ ” Dr. Richterman said. “To ask, why did that maskless transmission happen? Is there not enough space to eat? Are people working too many hours? It’s useful for systems to understand where transmissions are happening.”
Amith Skandhan, MD, SFHM, a hospitalist in Dothan, Ala., is comfortable without much contact tracing as long as there is universal PPE use. His hospital informs clinicians of exposures, but “basically we’re trained to treat every patient as if they had COVID,” he said, so “I feel more secure in the hospital than in the community.” Masks have become so habitual they’re like part of your regular clothing, he said – you feel incomplete if you don’t have one.
While ad hoc approaches to contact tracing may be useful in the current stage of the pandemic, they are likely to be short-lived: Once a community’s positivity rate falls, the CDC’s guidance suggests how hospitals can return to full contact tracing.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Like most health care workers at his hospital in Lafayette, Ind., Ramesh Adhikari, MD, FHM, occasionally gets an email noting that a patient he saw later tested positive for COVID-19. He’s reminded to self-monitor for symptoms. But 10 months into the pandemic, it has become increasingly unlikely for contact tracing investigations to result in clinicians quarantining.
The very act of working in the hospital, Dr. Adhikari said, means being likely to see COVID-19 every day, whether in a known patient or an asymptomatic person who tests positive later. If hospitalists had to quarantine after every interaction with a COVID-positive person, there wouldn’t be anyone left to do their jobs.
“It’s really hard to do [contact tracing] in health care workers thoroughly because of the way we work,” Dr. Adhikari said. “It’s impossible to do it absolutely.”
In a recently updated guidance, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention extended more leeway in contact tracing when community rates of COVID-19 surge, even allowing that contact tracing “may not be possible” in certain situations. And by defining an exposure more narrowly – health care workers are only considered “exposed” if their contact was more than 15 minutes or lacking in some form of PPE – the guidelines suggest that hospitals can rely more on universal PPE and screening protocols, as Dr. Adhikari’s hospital does, and less on extensive contact tracing to curtail viral spread.
Accordingly, while contact tracing has gotten more lax, doctors say, universal precautions – including full PPE and screening of symptoms for patients and health care workers – have become more stringent.
It’s a shift from the beginning of the pandemic. At first, CDC recommended wearing masks only during aerosol-producing procedures. Exposures were frequently reported and health care workers sent home. With more evidence in favor of stricter PPE requirements, hospitals including the one where Shyam Odeti, MD, FHM, works in Johnson City, Tenn., have adopted a universal precaution strategy – requiring masks everywhere and a gown, face shield, gloves, and N95 to enter a COVID-positive patient’s room. Thus, most exposures fall into that low-risk category.
“If I get it and am asymptomatic, I don’t think my colleagues would be exposed by any means because of these stringent policies being enforced,” said Dr. Odeti, a hospitalist who often wears a surgical mask on top of his N95 all day. “And U.S. health care is not in a state that can afford to quarantine health care workers for 14 days.”
Can universal PPE precautions supplant contact tracing?
The extent of contact tracing varies by hospital. Larger university and community hospitals often have infection control and occupational health teams that can do their own contact tracing, while smaller institutions can’t always spare staff. And some state health departments get involved with contact tracing of health care workers while others do not.
“I would venture to say that most hospitals are doing something in terms of contact tracing,” said Pam Falk, MPH, CIC, a member of the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology’s COVID-19 task force and an infection control consultant. “It kind of depends on their bandwidth.”
But there’s no longer a norm. Outside of a pandemic, with ample staffing and far fewer instances that need to be investigated, standards for contact tracing are higher, Dr. Falk said: When a patient is found to have an airborne disease such as tuberculosis, measles, mumps, or chickenpox, a hospital’s infection prevention team should investigate, confirm the diagnosis and identify everyone who was exposed. The hospital’s occupational health team assists in deciding who will likely need prophylactic treatment and if employees should be furloughed. The thoroughness of such measures has always depended on a hospital’s bandwidth.
Because PPE seems to be able to contain COVID-19 better than some of the older diseases targeted by contact tracing, universal protections may be a reasonable alternative in current circumstances, doctors said – if PPE is available.
“At the end of the day, universal source control with surgical masks – and ideally eye protection for clinicians as well – should prevent most transmissions,” said Aaron Richterman, MD, from the division of infectious diseases at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, who coauthored a JAMA commentary on decreased transmission rates in hospitals.
Contact tracing is still useful, though, to identify weaknesses in universal protection measures, he said.
“I don’t think it’s worth abandoning. It’s like a tool in the toolbox. All are imperfect, and none work 100% of the time,” Dr. Richterman said, but using all of them can achieve a fairly high measure of safety. Of the tools, universal masking likely works the best, he contends, so it should be the top pick for hospitals without resources to use all of the tools.
A recent incident at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston is a case study in how contact tracing can work together with universal protections to identify cracks in the system, said Dr. Richterman, who worked at the hospital earlier in the pandemic.
Mass General Brigham adopted a universal masking policy for staff and patients in March 2020. Then, when the system experienced an outbreak in September, the hospital did “a very detailed public evaluation that included contact tracing and universal testing,” Dr. Richterman said. Testing even included genetic analysis of the virus to confirm which cases were hospital acquired. In the end, the hospital identified weaknesses in infection control that could be rectified, such as clinicians eating too close together.
“The approach is not to point fingers, but to say: ‘What’s wrong with the system and how do we improve?’ ” Dr. Richterman said. “To ask, why did that maskless transmission happen? Is there not enough space to eat? Are people working too many hours? It’s useful for systems to understand where transmissions are happening.”
Amith Skandhan, MD, SFHM, a hospitalist in Dothan, Ala., is comfortable without much contact tracing as long as there is universal PPE use. His hospital informs clinicians of exposures, but “basically we’re trained to treat every patient as if they had COVID,” he said, so “I feel more secure in the hospital than in the community.” Masks have become so habitual they’re like part of your regular clothing, he said – you feel incomplete if you don’t have one.
While ad hoc approaches to contact tracing may be useful in the current stage of the pandemic, they are likely to be short-lived: Once a community’s positivity rate falls, the CDC’s guidance suggests how hospitals can return to full contact tracing.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
13 best practices to increase hospitalist billing efficiency
As an aspiring physician, I like learning about how things work. Since medical students learn very little about the “business” of medicine in school, this led me to pioneer a project on missed billing by hospitalists at a medium-sized hospital in the northeastern US. Although hospitalists do a tremendous amount of work, they do not always bill for what they are doing. The question became: Why are hospitalists missing charges and what can we do to stop it?
Shortly into my study, I recognized there was little daily communication between the administrators and the hospitalists; neither the hospitalists nor administrators understood the different dynamics that the others faced in their own workplace. It became apparent that administrators needed to learn what was important to hospitalists and to address them at their level in order to bring about change.
Some trending themes emerged as I started shadowing the hospitalists. Many of them asked how this project would benefit them. They argued that administrative needs should be dealt with at the administrative level. A major point was made that current incentives, such as the bonuses given for exceeding a certain number of RVUs, were not the motivating force behind their work ethics. From my observations, the motivating factors were the quality of their patient care, the needs of their patients, and teaching. The hospitalists also were eager to teach and continually instructed me on clinical skills and how to be a better medical student.
Bonuses or notoriety didn’t seem to be the main incentives for them. However, efficiency – especially in rounding – was important, and that became the focal point of the project. I found several studies that showed that improvements in aspects of rounding led to increased quality of patient care, decreased burnout, increased patient satisfaction, and decreased workload and discussed some of those findings with the hospitalists.1-10 When the hospitalists felt that their concerns were being heard, they became even more involved in the project, and the administrators and hospitalists started working together as a team.
One hospitalist spent two hours helping me design the platform that would be used for hospitalists to report barriers in their rounding process that may cause them to miss a charge. Once we identified those barriers, we discussed the possibility of standardizing their workflow based off these data. Many hospitalists argued that each physician has unique skills and practices that make them successful; therefore, the disruption of an already established workflow may cause a decrease in efficiency.
The hospitalists and I talked a lot about the importance of them rounding more efficiently and how that could positively affect the time that they have with their patients and themselves. We discussed that due to the additional work missed billing causes, minimizing this burden can possibly help decrease burnout. As a result, seven hospitalists, the administrative staff, and I met and created thirteen best practices, six of which they were able to get approved to use immediately. To note, hospitalists bill differently; some use a software company, fill out paper forms still or have integration within their EMR. Although these solutions were made for a program which has the ability to bill within the EMR, many of the principles will apply to your program too.
The 13 best practices that the seven hospitalists agreed upon are the following:
When a doctor signs a note, it opens a charge option or there is a hard stop.
Charge delinquencies are sent via email to the hospitalist.
Standardize that hospitalists charge directly after writing a note consistently as part of their workflow.*
Prioritize discharges before rounding.*
Standardize the use of the “my prof charges” column, a feature of this hospital’s EMR system that tells them if they had made a charge to a patient or not, in order to remind them to/confirm billing a patient.*
Create reports by the EMR system to provide charge data for individual providers.
Create a report for bill vs note to help providers self-audit. At this hospital, this feature was offered to the administrators as a way to audit their providers and doctors.
Ensure that when a patient is seen by a physician hospitalist as well as an NP/PA hospitalist, the appropriate charge for the physician is entered.
Notifications get sent to the physician hospitalist if a charge gets deleted by another person (e.g., NP/PA hospitalist).
Handoff of daily rounding sheets, or a paper copy of the patients assigned to a hospitalist for his/her shift, at the end of the shift to the project specialist.*
To keep the rounding sheets a complete and accurate account of the patients seen by the hospitalist.*
Hospitalists are to complete and check all billing at the end of their shift at the latest.*
Hospitalists are to participate on Provider Efficiency Training to optimize workflow, by creating more efficient note-writing behavior using Dragon.
*Indicates the practices the hospitalists were able to implement immediately. Practices 1, 2, 6, 7, and 9 request EMR changes. Practice 8 was already an established practice the hospitalists wished to continue. Practice 13 was suggested by the Lean Director for the continuation of a previous project.
Six of the best practices were easier to implement right away because they were at the discretion of the hospitalists. We found that the hospitalists who had the highest billing performances were more likely to start writing notes and charge earlier while rounding. Those who had poorer billing performances were more likely to leave all note writing and billing towards the end of their shift. The few exceptions (hospitalists who left all note writing and charging to the end of their shift yet had high billing performances) were found to have a consistent and standardized workflow. This was unlike the hospitalists who had the lowest billing performances. Having practices that help remind hospitalists to bill will surely help prevent missed billing, but because of the findings from this project, it was important to have consistent and standardized practices to additionally improve missed billing.
When we followed up with the hospitalist division two months later, we learned they were making great progress. Not only were hospitalists using their best practices, but in working with the administrators, they were designing sessions to further educate fellow hospitalists to prevent further missed billing. These sessions outlined shortcuts, resources and ways hospitalists may modify their personal EMR accounts to prevent missed billing. None of the progress could have been made without first understanding and addressing what is truly important to the hospitalists.
In summary, we noted these general observations in this project:
- Hospitalists favor solutions that benefit them or their patients.
- Hospitalists want to be part of the solution process.
- Hospitalists were more likely to accept ideas to improve their rounding if it meant they could keep their routine.
Obstacles exist in our health care system that prevent administrators and hospitalists from working together as a team. The more we are able to communicate and collaborate to fix problems in the health system, the more we can use the system to our mutual advantage. With the ongoing changes in medicine, especially during uncertain times, better communication needs be a major priority to affect positive change.
Ms. Mirabella attends the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University, Hamden, Conn., in the class of 2022. She has interests in internal/hospital medicine, primary care, and health management and leadership. Dr. Rosenberg is associate professor at the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University where she is director of clinical skills coaching. Dr. Kiassat is associate dean of the School of Engineering and associate clinical professor at Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine, at Quinnipiac University. His research interests are in process improvement in health care, using Lean Six Sigma.
References
1. Burdick K, et al. Bedside interprofessional rounding. J Patient Exp. 2017;4(1):22-27. doi: 10.1177/2374373517692910.
2. Patel CR. Improving communication between hospitalists and consultants. The Hospital Leader. 2018. https://thehospitalleader.org/improving-communication-between-hospitalists-and-consultants/.
3. Adams TN, et al. Hospitalist perspective of interactions with medicine subspecialty consult services. J Hosp Med. 2018;13(5):318-323. doi: 10.12788/jhm.2882.
4. Michtalik HJ, et al. Impact of attending physician workload on patient care: A survey of hospitalists. JAMA Intern Med. 2013;173(5):375-377. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.1864.
5. Chandra R, et al. How hospitalists can improve efficiency on inpatient wards. The Hospitalist. 2014. https://www.the-hospitalist.org/hospitalist/article/126231/how-hospitalists-can-improve-efficiency-inpatient-wards.
6. Chand DV. Observational study using the tools of lean six sigma to improve the efficiency of the resident rounding process. J Grad Med Educ. 2011;3(2):144-150. doi: 10.4300/JGME-D-10-00116.1.
7. O’Leary KJ, et al. How hospitalists spend their time: Insights on efficiency and safety. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(2):88-93. doi: 10.1002/jhm.88.
8. Wachter RM. Hospitalist workload: The search for the magic number. JAMA Intern Med. 2014;174(5):794-795. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2014.18.
9. Bryson C, et al. Geographical assignment of hospitalists in an urban teaching hospital: Feasibility and impact on efficiency and provider satisfaction. Hospital Practice. 2017;45(4):135-142. doi: 10.1080/21548331.2017.1353884.
10. Calderon AS, et al. Transforming ward rounds through rounding-in-flow. J Grad Med Educ. 2014 Dec;6(4):750-5. doi: 10.4300/JGME-D-13-00324.1.
As an aspiring physician, I like learning about how things work. Since medical students learn very little about the “business” of medicine in school, this led me to pioneer a project on missed billing by hospitalists at a medium-sized hospital in the northeastern US. Although hospitalists do a tremendous amount of work, they do not always bill for what they are doing. The question became: Why are hospitalists missing charges and what can we do to stop it?
Shortly into my study, I recognized there was little daily communication between the administrators and the hospitalists; neither the hospitalists nor administrators understood the different dynamics that the others faced in their own workplace. It became apparent that administrators needed to learn what was important to hospitalists and to address them at their level in order to bring about change.
Some trending themes emerged as I started shadowing the hospitalists. Many of them asked how this project would benefit them. They argued that administrative needs should be dealt with at the administrative level. A major point was made that current incentives, such as the bonuses given for exceeding a certain number of RVUs, were not the motivating force behind their work ethics. From my observations, the motivating factors were the quality of their patient care, the needs of their patients, and teaching. The hospitalists also were eager to teach and continually instructed me on clinical skills and how to be a better medical student.
Bonuses or notoriety didn’t seem to be the main incentives for them. However, efficiency – especially in rounding – was important, and that became the focal point of the project. I found several studies that showed that improvements in aspects of rounding led to increased quality of patient care, decreased burnout, increased patient satisfaction, and decreased workload and discussed some of those findings with the hospitalists.1-10 When the hospitalists felt that their concerns were being heard, they became even more involved in the project, and the administrators and hospitalists started working together as a team.
One hospitalist spent two hours helping me design the platform that would be used for hospitalists to report barriers in their rounding process that may cause them to miss a charge. Once we identified those barriers, we discussed the possibility of standardizing their workflow based off these data. Many hospitalists argued that each physician has unique skills and practices that make them successful; therefore, the disruption of an already established workflow may cause a decrease in efficiency.
The hospitalists and I talked a lot about the importance of them rounding more efficiently and how that could positively affect the time that they have with their patients and themselves. We discussed that due to the additional work missed billing causes, minimizing this burden can possibly help decrease burnout. As a result, seven hospitalists, the administrative staff, and I met and created thirteen best practices, six of which they were able to get approved to use immediately. To note, hospitalists bill differently; some use a software company, fill out paper forms still or have integration within their EMR. Although these solutions were made for a program which has the ability to bill within the EMR, many of the principles will apply to your program too.
The 13 best practices that the seven hospitalists agreed upon are the following:
When a doctor signs a note, it opens a charge option or there is a hard stop.
Charge delinquencies are sent via email to the hospitalist.
Standardize that hospitalists charge directly after writing a note consistently as part of their workflow.*
Prioritize discharges before rounding.*
Standardize the use of the “my prof charges” column, a feature of this hospital’s EMR system that tells them if they had made a charge to a patient or not, in order to remind them to/confirm billing a patient.*
Create reports by the EMR system to provide charge data for individual providers.
Create a report for bill vs note to help providers self-audit. At this hospital, this feature was offered to the administrators as a way to audit their providers and doctors.
Ensure that when a patient is seen by a physician hospitalist as well as an NP/PA hospitalist, the appropriate charge for the physician is entered.
Notifications get sent to the physician hospitalist if a charge gets deleted by another person (e.g., NP/PA hospitalist).
Handoff of daily rounding sheets, or a paper copy of the patients assigned to a hospitalist for his/her shift, at the end of the shift to the project specialist.*
To keep the rounding sheets a complete and accurate account of the patients seen by the hospitalist.*
Hospitalists are to complete and check all billing at the end of their shift at the latest.*
Hospitalists are to participate on Provider Efficiency Training to optimize workflow, by creating more efficient note-writing behavior using Dragon.
*Indicates the practices the hospitalists were able to implement immediately. Practices 1, 2, 6, 7, and 9 request EMR changes. Practice 8 was already an established practice the hospitalists wished to continue. Practice 13 was suggested by the Lean Director for the continuation of a previous project.
Six of the best practices were easier to implement right away because they were at the discretion of the hospitalists. We found that the hospitalists who had the highest billing performances were more likely to start writing notes and charge earlier while rounding. Those who had poorer billing performances were more likely to leave all note writing and billing towards the end of their shift. The few exceptions (hospitalists who left all note writing and charging to the end of their shift yet had high billing performances) were found to have a consistent and standardized workflow. This was unlike the hospitalists who had the lowest billing performances. Having practices that help remind hospitalists to bill will surely help prevent missed billing, but because of the findings from this project, it was important to have consistent and standardized practices to additionally improve missed billing.
When we followed up with the hospitalist division two months later, we learned they were making great progress. Not only were hospitalists using their best practices, but in working with the administrators, they were designing sessions to further educate fellow hospitalists to prevent further missed billing. These sessions outlined shortcuts, resources and ways hospitalists may modify their personal EMR accounts to prevent missed billing. None of the progress could have been made without first understanding and addressing what is truly important to the hospitalists.
In summary, we noted these general observations in this project:
- Hospitalists favor solutions that benefit them or their patients.
- Hospitalists want to be part of the solution process.
- Hospitalists were more likely to accept ideas to improve their rounding if it meant they could keep their routine.
Obstacles exist in our health care system that prevent administrators and hospitalists from working together as a team. The more we are able to communicate and collaborate to fix problems in the health system, the more we can use the system to our mutual advantage. With the ongoing changes in medicine, especially during uncertain times, better communication needs be a major priority to affect positive change.
Ms. Mirabella attends the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University, Hamden, Conn., in the class of 2022. She has interests in internal/hospital medicine, primary care, and health management and leadership. Dr. Rosenberg is associate professor at the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University where she is director of clinical skills coaching. Dr. Kiassat is associate dean of the School of Engineering and associate clinical professor at Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine, at Quinnipiac University. His research interests are in process improvement in health care, using Lean Six Sigma.
References
1. Burdick K, et al. Bedside interprofessional rounding. J Patient Exp. 2017;4(1):22-27. doi: 10.1177/2374373517692910.
2. Patel CR. Improving communication between hospitalists and consultants. The Hospital Leader. 2018. https://thehospitalleader.org/improving-communication-between-hospitalists-and-consultants/.
3. Adams TN, et al. Hospitalist perspective of interactions with medicine subspecialty consult services. J Hosp Med. 2018;13(5):318-323. doi: 10.12788/jhm.2882.
4. Michtalik HJ, et al. Impact of attending physician workload on patient care: A survey of hospitalists. JAMA Intern Med. 2013;173(5):375-377. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.1864.
5. Chandra R, et al. How hospitalists can improve efficiency on inpatient wards. The Hospitalist. 2014. https://www.the-hospitalist.org/hospitalist/article/126231/how-hospitalists-can-improve-efficiency-inpatient-wards.
6. Chand DV. Observational study using the tools of lean six sigma to improve the efficiency of the resident rounding process. J Grad Med Educ. 2011;3(2):144-150. doi: 10.4300/JGME-D-10-00116.1.
7. O’Leary KJ, et al. How hospitalists spend their time: Insights on efficiency and safety. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(2):88-93. doi: 10.1002/jhm.88.
8. Wachter RM. Hospitalist workload: The search for the magic number. JAMA Intern Med. 2014;174(5):794-795. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2014.18.
9. Bryson C, et al. Geographical assignment of hospitalists in an urban teaching hospital: Feasibility and impact on efficiency and provider satisfaction. Hospital Practice. 2017;45(4):135-142. doi: 10.1080/21548331.2017.1353884.
10. Calderon AS, et al. Transforming ward rounds through rounding-in-flow. J Grad Med Educ. 2014 Dec;6(4):750-5. doi: 10.4300/JGME-D-13-00324.1.
As an aspiring physician, I like learning about how things work. Since medical students learn very little about the “business” of medicine in school, this led me to pioneer a project on missed billing by hospitalists at a medium-sized hospital in the northeastern US. Although hospitalists do a tremendous amount of work, they do not always bill for what they are doing. The question became: Why are hospitalists missing charges and what can we do to stop it?
Shortly into my study, I recognized there was little daily communication between the administrators and the hospitalists; neither the hospitalists nor administrators understood the different dynamics that the others faced in their own workplace. It became apparent that administrators needed to learn what was important to hospitalists and to address them at their level in order to bring about change.
Some trending themes emerged as I started shadowing the hospitalists. Many of them asked how this project would benefit them. They argued that administrative needs should be dealt with at the administrative level. A major point was made that current incentives, such as the bonuses given for exceeding a certain number of RVUs, were not the motivating force behind their work ethics. From my observations, the motivating factors were the quality of their patient care, the needs of their patients, and teaching. The hospitalists also were eager to teach and continually instructed me on clinical skills and how to be a better medical student.
Bonuses or notoriety didn’t seem to be the main incentives for them. However, efficiency – especially in rounding – was important, and that became the focal point of the project. I found several studies that showed that improvements in aspects of rounding led to increased quality of patient care, decreased burnout, increased patient satisfaction, and decreased workload and discussed some of those findings with the hospitalists.1-10 When the hospitalists felt that their concerns were being heard, they became even more involved in the project, and the administrators and hospitalists started working together as a team.
One hospitalist spent two hours helping me design the platform that would be used for hospitalists to report barriers in their rounding process that may cause them to miss a charge. Once we identified those barriers, we discussed the possibility of standardizing their workflow based off these data. Many hospitalists argued that each physician has unique skills and practices that make them successful; therefore, the disruption of an already established workflow may cause a decrease in efficiency.
The hospitalists and I talked a lot about the importance of them rounding more efficiently and how that could positively affect the time that they have with their patients and themselves. We discussed that due to the additional work missed billing causes, minimizing this burden can possibly help decrease burnout. As a result, seven hospitalists, the administrative staff, and I met and created thirteen best practices, six of which they were able to get approved to use immediately. To note, hospitalists bill differently; some use a software company, fill out paper forms still or have integration within their EMR. Although these solutions were made for a program which has the ability to bill within the EMR, many of the principles will apply to your program too.
The 13 best practices that the seven hospitalists agreed upon are the following:
When a doctor signs a note, it opens a charge option or there is a hard stop.
Charge delinquencies are sent via email to the hospitalist.
Standardize that hospitalists charge directly after writing a note consistently as part of their workflow.*
Prioritize discharges before rounding.*
Standardize the use of the “my prof charges” column, a feature of this hospital’s EMR system that tells them if they had made a charge to a patient or not, in order to remind them to/confirm billing a patient.*
Create reports by the EMR system to provide charge data for individual providers.
Create a report for bill vs note to help providers self-audit. At this hospital, this feature was offered to the administrators as a way to audit their providers and doctors.
Ensure that when a patient is seen by a physician hospitalist as well as an NP/PA hospitalist, the appropriate charge for the physician is entered.
Notifications get sent to the physician hospitalist if a charge gets deleted by another person (e.g., NP/PA hospitalist).
Handoff of daily rounding sheets, or a paper copy of the patients assigned to a hospitalist for his/her shift, at the end of the shift to the project specialist.*
To keep the rounding sheets a complete and accurate account of the patients seen by the hospitalist.*
Hospitalists are to complete and check all billing at the end of their shift at the latest.*
Hospitalists are to participate on Provider Efficiency Training to optimize workflow, by creating more efficient note-writing behavior using Dragon.
*Indicates the practices the hospitalists were able to implement immediately. Practices 1, 2, 6, 7, and 9 request EMR changes. Practice 8 was already an established practice the hospitalists wished to continue. Practice 13 was suggested by the Lean Director for the continuation of a previous project.
Six of the best practices were easier to implement right away because they were at the discretion of the hospitalists. We found that the hospitalists who had the highest billing performances were more likely to start writing notes and charge earlier while rounding. Those who had poorer billing performances were more likely to leave all note writing and billing towards the end of their shift. The few exceptions (hospitalists who left all note writing and charging to the end of their shift yet had high billing performances) were found to have a consistent and standardized workflow. This was unlike the hospitalists who had the lowest billing performances. Having practices that help remind hospitalists to bill will surely help prevent missed billing, but because of the findings from this project, it was important to have consistent and standardized practices to additionally improve missed billing.
When we followed up with the hospitalist division two months later, we learned they were making great progress. Not only were hospitalists using their best practices, but in working with the administrators, they were designing sessions to further educate fellow hospitalists to prevent further missed billing. These sessions outlined shortcuts, resources and ways hospitalists may modify their personal EMR accounts to prevent missed billing. None of the progress could have been made without first understanding and addressing what is truly important to the hospitalists.
In summary, we noted these general observations in this project:
- Hospitalists favor solutions that benefit them or their patients.
- Hospitalists want to be part of the solution process.
- Hospitalists were more likely to accept ideas to improve their rounding if it meant they could keep their routine.
Obstacles exist in our health care system that prevent administrators and hospitalists from working together as a team. The more we are able to communicate and collaborate to fix problems in the health system, the more we can use the system to our mutual advantage. With the ongoing changes in medicine, especially during uncertain times, better communication needs be a major priority to affect positive change.
Ms. Mirabella attends the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University, Hamden, Conn., in the class of 2022. She has interests in internal/hospital medicine, primary care, and health management and leadership. Dr. Rosenberg is associate professor at the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University where she is director of clinical skills coaching. Dr. Kiassat is associate dean of the School of Engineering and associate clinical professor at Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine, at Quinnipiac University. His research interests are in process improvement in health care, using Lean Six Sigma.
References
1. Burdick K, et al. Bedside interprofessional rounding. J Patient Exp. 2017;4(1):22-27. doi: 10.1177/2374373517692910.
2. Patel CR. Improving communication between hospitalists and consultants. The Hospital Leader. 2018. https://thehospitalleader.org/improving-communication-between-hospitalists-and-consultants/.
3. Adams TN, et al. Hospitalist perspective of interactions with medicine subspecialty consult services. J Hosp Med. 2018;13(5):318-323. doi: 10.12788/jhm.2882.
4. Michtalik HJ, et al. Impact of attending physician workload on patient care: A survey of hospitalists. JAMA Intern Med. 2013;173(5):375-377. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.1864.
5. Chandra R, et al. How hospitalists can improve efficiency on inpatient wards. The Hospitalist. 2014. https://www.the-hospitalist.org/hospitalist/article/126231/how-hospitalists-can-improve-efficiency-inpatient-wards.
6. Chand DV. Observational study using the tools of lean six sigma to improve the efficiency of the resident rounding process. J Grad Med Educ. 2011;3(2):144-150. doi: 10.4300/JGME-D-10-00116.1.
7. O’Leary KJ, et al. How hospitalists spend their time: Insights on efficiency and safety. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(2):88-93. doi: 10.1002/jhm.88.
8. Wachter RM. Hospitalist workload: The search for the magic number. JAMA Intern Med. 2014;174(5):794-795. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2014.18.
9. Bryson C, et al. Geographical assignment of hospitalists in an urban teaching hospital: Feasibility and impact on efficiency and provider satisfaction. Hospital Practice. 2017;45(4):135-142. doi: 10.1080/21548331.2017.1353884.
10. Calderon AS, et al. Transforming ward rounds through rounding-in-flow. J Grad Med Educ. 2014 Dec;6(4):750-5. doi: 10.4300/JGME-D-13-00324.1.
COVID-related harm to HCWs must be tracked more rigorously: NAS panel
A panel of scientific experts is urging the nation to do more to track morbidity and mortality among health care workers (HCWs), given the large and disproportionate number who have been infected with or died from SARS-CoV-2.
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine’s Standing Committee on Emerging Infectious Diseases and 21st Century Health Threats issued a 10-page “rapid expert consultation” on what is known about deaths and mental health problems among HCWs associated with the COVID-19 pandemic and how to protect workers.
“The absence of a uniform national framework and inconsistent requirements across states for collecting, recording, and reporting HCW mortality and morbidity data associated with COVID-19 impairs anyone’s ability to make comparisons, do combined analyses, or draw conclusions about the scale of the problem,” says the panel in the report.
Mental health, in particular, needs to be examined, it says. Although the data are still limited, the prevalence of burnout and suicide “points to a serious concern,” according to the report.
“As with mortality due to COVID-19, there are currently no national systems nor reporting standards for morbidity measures related to the pandemic, such as mental health status, provider well-being, and other psychological effects on HCWs,” the report says.
A more robust national system that collected data on circumstances and interventions that may raise or lower risk, as well as on where the infection occurred, “would support the adoption of effective mitigation strategies,” says the report. It would also facilitate epidemiologic studies on risk factors, such as face-to-face contact with COVID-19 patients and the availability and use of personal protective equipment (PPE). Studies could also examine the impact of institutional requirements for masking.
Studies have consistently shown that universal mask wearing and access to appropriate PPE support the physical safety and mental health of HCWs, says the report.
Track scale of crisis
The committee cited many gaps in the current system. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration, for instance, doesn’t count deaths from occupationally acquired infection. Many states don’t report COVID-19 deaths by profession. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) relies on case report forms from local health departments for all COVID-19 cases, which typically are lacking in specifics, such as occupation or job setting, says the committee’s report.
As of Nov. 3, the CDC had reported 786 deaths among HCWs that were attributable to COVID-19 – a far lower number than other sources have reported.
The committee notes that much could be done immediately. A National Academy of Medicine panel on clinician well-being and resilience in August recommended that the CDC establish a national epidemiologic tracking program to measure HCWs’ well-being, assess the acute and long-term effects of COVID-19 on those workers, and report on the outcomes of interventions.
Such a program “is needed to comprehensively acknowledge the scale of the COVID-19 crisis and protect the health care workforce that is already stretched to the breaking point in many locations,” the committee says in its report.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
A panel of scientific experts is urging the nation to do more to track morbidity and mortality among health care workers (HCWs), given the large and disproportionate number who have been infected with or died from SARS-CoV-2.
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine’s Standing Committee on Emerging Infectious Diseases and 21st Century Health Threats issued a 10-page “rapid expert consultation” on what is known about deaths and mental health problems among HCWs associated with the COVID-19 pandemic and how to protect workers.
“The absence of a uniform national framework and inconsistent requirements across states for collecting, recording, and reporting HCW mortality and morbidity data associated with COVID-19 impairs anyone’s ability to make comparisons, do combined analyses, or draw conclusions about the scale of the problem,” says the panel in the report.
Mental health, in particular, needs to be examined, it says. Although the data are still limited, the prevalence of burnout and suicide “points to a serious concern,” according to the report.
“As with mortality due to COVID-19, there are currently no national systems nor reporting standards for morbidity measures related to the pandemic, such as mental health status, provider well-being, and other psychological effects on HCWs,” the report says.
A more robust national system that collected data on circumstances and interventions that may raise or lower risk, as well as on where the infection occurred, “would support the adoption of effective mitigation strategies,” says the report. It would also facilitate epidemiologic studies on risk factors, such as face-to-face contact with COVID-19 patients and the availability and use of personal protective equipment (PPE). Studies could also examine the impact of institutional requirements for masking.
Studies have consistently shown that universal mask wearing and access to appropriate PPE support the physical safety and mental health of HCWs, says the report.
Track scale of crisis
The committee cited many gaps in the current system. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration, for instance, doesn’t count deaths from occupationally acquired infection. Many states don’t report COVID-19 deaths by profession. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) relies on case report forms from local health departments for all COVID-19 cases, which typically are lacking in specifics, such as occupation or job setting, says the committee’s report.
As of Nov. 3, the CDC had reported 786 deaths among HCWs that were attributable to COVID-19 – a far lower number than other sources have reported.
The committee notes that much could be done immediately. A National Academy of Medicine panel on clinician well-being and resilience in August recommended that the CDC establish a national epidemiologic tracking program to measure HCWs’ well-being, assess the acute and long-term effects of COVID-19 on those workers, and report on the outcomes of interventions.
Such a program “is needed to comprehensively acknowledge the scale of the COVID-19 crisis and protect the health care workforce that is already stretched to the breaking point in many locations,” the committee says in its report.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
A panel of scientific experts is urging the nation to do more to track morbidity and mortality among health care workers (HCWs), given the large and disproportionate number who have been infected with or died from SARS-CoV-2.
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine’s Standing Committee on Emerging Infectious Diseases and 21st Century Health Threats issued a 10-page “rapid expert consultation” on what is known about deaths and mental health problems among HCWs associated with the COVID-19 pandemic and how to protect workers.
“The absence of a uniform national framework and inconsistent requirements across states for collecting, recording, and reporting HCW mortality and morbidity data associated with COVID-19 impairs anyone’s ability to make comparisons, do combined analyses, or draw conclusions about the scale of the problem,” says the panel in the report.
Mental health, in particular, needs to be examined, it says. Although the data are still limited, the prevalence of burnout and suicide “points to a serious concern,” according to the report.
“As with mortality due to COVID-19, there are currently no national systems nor reporting standards for morbidity measures related to the pandemic, such as mental health status, provider well-being, and other psychological effects on HCWs,” the report says.
A more robust national system that collected data on circumstances and interventions that may raise or lower risk, as well as on where the infection occurred, “would support the adoption of effective mitigation strategies,” says the report. It would also facilitate epidemiologic studies on risk factors, such as face-to-face contact with COVID-19 patients and the availability and use of personal protective equipment (PPE). Studies could also examine the impact of institutional requirements for masking.
Studies have consistently shown that universal mask wearing and access to appropriate PPE support the physical safety and mental health of HCWs, says the report.
Track scale of crisis
The committee cited many gaps in the current system. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration, for instance, doesn’t count deaths from occupationally acquired infection. Many states don’t report COVID-19 deaths by profession. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) relies on case report forms from local health departments for all COVID-19 cases, which typically are lacking in specifics, such as occupation or job setting, says the committee’s report.
As of Nov. 3, the CDC had reported 786 deaths among HCWs that were attributable to COVID-19 – a far lower number than other sources have reported.
The committee notes that much could be done immediately. A National Academy of Medicine panel on clinician well-being and resilience in August recommended that the CDC establish a national epidemiologic tracking program to measure HCWs’ well-being, assess the acute and long-term effects of COVID-19 on those workers, and report on the outcomes of interventions.
Such a program “is needed to comprehensively acknowledge the scale of the COVID-19 crisis and protect the health care workforce that is already stretched to the breaking point in many locations,” the committee says in its report.
A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.
Bias against hiring hospitalists trained in family medicine still persists
Outdated perceptions of family medicine
A family medicine trained doctor, fresh out of residency, visits a career website to scout out prospective hospitalist jobs in their region. As they scroll through the job listings, they come across one opportunity at a nearby hospital system that seems like a good fit. The listing offers a competitive salary and comprehensive benefits for the position, and mentions hospitalists in the department will have the opportunity to teach medical students.
The only problem? The position is for internal medicine trained doctors only. After searching through several more listings with the same internal medicine requirement, the pool of jobs available to the family medicine doctor seems much smaller.
When Robert M. Wachter, MD, MHM, and Lee Goldman, MD coined the term “hospitalist” in a 1996 New England Journal of Medicine article, hospitalists were primarily clinicians with an internal medicine background, filling the gap created by family medicine doctors who increasingly devoted their time to patients in their practice and spent less time rounding in the hospital.
As family medicine doctors have returned to hospital medicine, it has become difficult to find positions as hospitalists due to a preference by some recruiters and employers that favors internal medicine physicians over those who are trained in family medicine. The preference for internal medicine physicians is sometimes overt, such as a requirement on a job application. But the preference can also surface after a physician has already applied for a position, and they will then discover a recruiter is actually looking for someone with a background in internal medicine. In other cases, family medicine physicians find out after applying that applicants with a background in family medicine are considered, but they’re expected to have additional training or certification not listed on the job application.
The situation can even be as stark as a hospital system hiring an internal medicine doctor just out of residency over a family medicine doctor with years of experience as a board-certified physician. Hiring practices in large systems across multiple states sometimes don’t just favor internal medicine, they are entirely focused on internal medicine hospitalists, said experts who spoke with The Hospitalist.
Outdated perceptions of family medicine
Victoria McCurry, MD, current chair of the Society of Hospital Medicine’s family medicine Special Interest Group (SIG) Executive Committee and Faculty Director of Inpatient Services at UPMC McKeesport (Pa.) Family Medicine Residency, said hearsay inside the family medicine community influenced her first job search looking for hospitalist positions as a family medicine physician.
“I was intentional about choosing places that I assumed would be open to family medicine,” she said. “I avoided the downtown urban academic hospitals, the ones that had a large internal medicine residency and fellowship presence, because I assumed that they would not hire me.
“There’s a recognition that depending on the system that you’re in and their history with family medicine trained hospitalists, it can be difficult as a family physician to seek employment,” Dr. McCurry said.
“When I graduated from my residency in 2014, I did not have the same opportunities to be a hospitalist as an internal medicine resident would have,” said Shyam Odeti, MD, a family-practice-trained hospitalist who works at Ballad Health in Johnson City, Tenn. “The perception is family medicine physicians are not trained for hospitalist practice. It’s an old perception.”
This perception may have to do with the mindset of the leadership where a doctor has had residency training, according to Usman Chaudhry, MD, a family medicine hospitalist with Texas Health Physicians Group and leader of the National Advocacy subcommittee for the Family Medicine Executive Council in SHM. Residents trained in bigger university hospital systems where internal medicine (IM) residents do mostly inpatient – in addition to outpatient services – and family medicine (FM) residents do mostly outpatient – including pediatrics and ob/gyn clinics in addition to inpatient services – may believe that to be the case in other systems too, Dr. Chaudhry explained.
“When you go to community hospital residency programs, it’s totally different,” he said. “It all depends. If you have only family medicine residency in a community hospital, they tend to do all training of inpatient clinical medicine, as IM training would in any other program”
Dr. McCurry noted that there seems to be a persisting, mental assumption that as a family medicine doctor, you’re only going to be practicing outpatient only or maybe urgent care, which is historically just not the case. “If that’s ingrained within the local hospital system, then it will be difficult for that system to hire a family medicine-trained hospitalist,” she said.
Another source of outdated perceptions of family medicine come from hospital and institutional bylaws that have written internal medicine training in as a requirement for hospitalists. “In many bigger systems, and even in the smaller hospital community and regional hospitals, the bylaws of the hospitals were written approximately 20 years ago,” Dr. Chaudhry said.
Unless someone has advocated for updating a hospital or institution’s bylaws, they may have outdated requirements for hospitalists. “The situation right now is, in a lot of urban hospitals, they would be able to give a hospitalist position to internal medicine residents who just graduated, not even board certified, but they cannot give it to a hospitalist trained in family medicine who has worked for 10 years and is board certified, just because of the bylaws,” said Dr. Odeti who is also co-chair for the SHM National Advocacy subcommittee of hospitalists trained in family medicine. “There is no good rhyme or reason to it. It is just there and they haven’t changed it.”
Dr. Chaudhry added that no one provides an adequate reason for the bias during the hiring process. “If you ask the recruiter, they would say ‘the employer asked me [to do it this way].’ If you ask the employers, they say ‘the hospital’s bylaws say that.’ And then, we request changes to the hospital bylaws because you don’t have access to them. So the burden of responsibility falls on the shoulders of hospitalists in leadership positions to request equal privileges from the hospital boards for FM-trained hospitalists.”
Experience, education closes some gaps
Over the years, the American Board of Family Medicine (ABFM) and SHM have offered several opportunities for family medicine doctors to demonstrate their experience and training in hospital medicine. In 2010, ABFM began offering the Focused Recognition of Hospital Medicine board examination, together with the American Board of Internal Medicine. SHM also offers hospitalist fellowships and a designation of Fellow in Hospital Medicine (FHM) for health care professionals. In 2015, ABFM and SHM released a joint statement encouraging the growth of hospitalists trained in family medicine (HTFM) and outlining these opportunities.
These measures help fill a gap in both IM and FM training, but also appear to have some effect in convincing recruiters and employers to consider family medicine doctors for hospitalist positions. An abstract published at Hospital Medicine 2014 reviewed 252 hospitalist positions listed in journals and search engines attempted to document the disparities in job listings, the perceptions of physician recruiters, and how factors like experience, training, and certification impacted a family medicine physician’s likelihood to be considered for a position. HTFMs were explicitly mentioned as being eligible in 119 of 252 positions (47%). The investigators then sent surveys out to physician recruiters of the remaining 133 positions asking whether HTFMs were being considered for the position. The results of the survey showed 66% of the recruiters were open to HTFMs, while 34% of recruiters said they did not have a willingness to hire HTFMs.
That willingness to hire changed based on the level of experience, training, and certification. More than one-fourth (29%) of physician recruiters said institutional bylaws prevented hiring of HTFMs. If respondents earned a Recognition of Focused Practice in Hospital Medicine (RFPHM) board examination, 78% of physician recruiters would reconsider hiring the candidate. If the HTFM applicant had prior experience in hospital medicine, 87% of physician recruiters said they would consider the candidate. HTFMs who earned a Designation of Fellow in Hospital Medicine (FHM) from SHM would be reconsidered by 93% of physician recruiters who initially refused the HTFM candidate. All physician recruiters said they would reconsider if the candidate had a fellowship in hospital medicine.
However, to date, there is no official American College of Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)-recognized hospitalist board certification or designated specialty credentialing. This can lead to situations where family medicine trained physicians are applying for jobs without the necessary requirements for the position, because those requirements may not be immediately obvious when first applying to a position. “There’s often no specification until you apply and then are informed that you don’t qualify – ‘Oh, no, you haven’t completed a fellowship,’ or the added qualification in hospital medicine,” Dr. McCurry said.
The 2015 joint statement from AAFP and SHM asserts that “more than two-thirds of HTFMs are also involved in the training of residents and medical students, enhancing the skills of our future physicians.” But when HTFMs do find positions, they may be limited in other ways, such as being prohibited from serving on the faculty of internal medicine residency programs and teaching internal medicine residents. When Dr. Odeti was medical director for Johnston Memorial Hospital in Abingdon, Va., he said he encountered this issue.
“If you are a hospitalist who is internal medicine trained, then you can teach FM or IM, whereas if you’re family medicine trained, you cannot teach internal medicine residents,” he said. “What happened with me, I had to prioritize recruiting internal medicine residents over FM residents to be able to staff IM teaching faculty.”
A rule change has been lobbied by SHM, under the direction of SHM family medicine SIG former chair David Goldstein, MD, to address this issue that would allow HTFMs with a FPHM designation to teach IM residents. The change was quietly made by the ACGME Review Committee for Internal Medicine in 2017, Dr. McCurry said, but implementation of the change has been slow.
“Essentially, the change was made in 2017 to allow for family medicine trainied physicians who have the FPHM designation to teach IM residents, but this knowledge has not been widely dispersed or policies updated to clearly reflect this change,” Dr. McCurry said. “It is a significant change, however, because prior to that, there were explicit policies preventing a family medicine hospitalist from teaching internal medicine residents even if they were experienced.”
FM physicians uniquely suited for HM
Requirements aside, it is “arguably not the case” that family medicine physicians need these extra certifications and fellowships to serve as hospitalists, Dr. McCurry said. It is difficult to quantify IM and FM hospitalist quality outcomes due to challenges with attribution, Dr. Odeti noted. One 2007 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine looked at patient quality and cost of care across the hospitalist model, and family medicine practitioners providing inpatients care. The investigators found similar outcomes in the internist model and with family practitioners providing inpatient care. Dr. Odeti said this research supports “the fact that family medicine physicians are equally competent as internists in providing inpatient care.”
Dr. Odeti argued that family medicine training is valuable for work as a hospitalist. “Hospital medicine is a team sport. You have a quarterback, you have a wide receiver, you have a running back. Everybody has a role to play and everybody has their own strength,” he said.
Family medicine hospitalists are uniquely positioned to handle the shift within hospital medicine from volume to value-based care. “That does not depend solely on what we do within the hospital. It depends a lot on what we do for the patients as they get out of the hospital into the community,” he explained.
Family medicine hospitalists are also well prepared to handle the continuum of care for patients in the hospital. “In their training, FM hospitalists have their own patient panels and they have complete ownership of their patient in their training, so they are prepared because they know how to set up things for outpatients,” Dr. Odeti explained.
“Every hospitalist group needs to use the family medicine doctors to their advantage,” he said. “A family medicine trained hospitalist should be part of every good hospitalist group, is what I would say.”
HTFMs are growing within SHM
HTFMs are “all over,” being represented in smaller hospitals, larger hospitals, and university hospitals in every state. “But to reach those positions, they probably have to go over more hurdles and have fewer opportunities,” Dr. Chaudhry said.
There isn’t a completely accurate count of family medicine hospitalists in the United States. Out of an estimated 50,000 hospitalists in the U. S., about 16,000 hospitalists are members of SHM. A number of family medicine hospitalists may also take AAFP membership instead of SHM, Dr. Odeti explained.
However, there are a growing number of hospitalists within SHM with a family medicine background. In the 2007-2008 Society of Hospital Medicine Annual Survey, 3.7% of U.S. hospitalists claimed family medicine training. That number increased to 6.9% of physicians who answered the SHM membership data report in 2010.
A Medscape Hospitalist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report from 2019 estimates 17% of hospitalists are trained in family medicine. In the latest State of Hospital Medicine Report published in 2020, 38.6% of hospital medicine groups containing family medicine trained physicians were part of a university, medical school, or faculty practice; 79.6% did not have academic status; 83.8% were at a non-teaching hospital; 60.7% were in a group in a non-teaching service at a teaching hospital; and 52.8% were in a group at a combination teaching/non-teaching service at a teaching hospital.
Although the Report did not specify whether family medicine hospitalists were mainly in rural or urban areas, “some of us do practice in underserved area hospitals where you have the smaller ICU model, critical access hospitals, potentially dealing with a whole gamut of inpatient medicine from ER, to the hospital inpatient adult cases, to critical care level,” Dr. McCurry said.
“But then, there are a large number of us who practice in private groups or at large hospitals, academic centers around the country,” she added. “There’s a range of family medicine trained hospitalist practice areas.”
Equal recognition for HTFM in HM
The SHM family medicine SIG has been working to highlight the issue of hiring practices for HTFMs, and is taking a number of actions to bring greater awareness and recognition to family medicine hospitalists.
The family medicine SIG is looking at steps for requesting a new joint statement from ABFM and SHM focused on hiring practices for family medicine physicians as hospitalists. “I think it’s worth considering now that we’re at a point where we comprise about one-fifth of hospitalists as family medicine docs,” Dr. McCurry said. “Is it time to take that joint statement to the next step, and seek a review of how we can improve the balance of hiring in terms of favoring more balanced consideration now that there are a lot more family medicine trained hospitalists than historically?
“I think the call is really to help us all move to that next step in terms of identifying any of the lingering vestiges of expectation that are really no longer applicable to the hiring practices, or shouldn’t be,” she said.
The next step will be to ask hospitals with internal medicine only requirements for hospitalists to update their bylaws to include family medicine physicians when considering candidates for hospitalist positions. If SHM does not make a distinction to grant Fellow in Hospital Medicine status between internal medicine and family medicine trained hospitalists, “then there should not be any distinction, or there should not be any hindrance by the recruiters, by the bigger systems, as well as by the employers” in hiring a family medicine trained physician for a hospitalist position, Dr. Chaudhry said.
Dr. Odeti, who serves in several leadership roles within Ballad Health, describes the system as being friendly to HTFMs. About one-fourth of the hospitalists in Ballad Health are trained in family medicine. But when Dr. Odeti started his hospitalist practice, he was only one of a handful of HTFMs. He sees a future where the accomplishments and contributions of HTFMs will pave the way for future hospitalists. “Access into the urban hospitals is key, and I hope that SHM and the HTFM SIG will act as a catalyst for this change,” he said.
Colleagues of family medicine hospitalists, especially those in leadership positions at hospitals, can help by raising awareness, as can “those of our colleagues who sit on medical executive committees within their hospitals to review their bylaws, to see what the policies are, and encourage more competitiveness,” Dr. McCurry said. “Truly, the best candidate for the position, regardless of background and training, is what you want. You want the best colleagues for your fellow hospitalists. You want the best physician for your patients in the hospital.”
If training and all other things are equal, family medicine physicians should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis, she said. “I think that that puts the burden back on any good medical committee, and a good medical committee member who is an SHM member as well, to say, ‘If we are committed to quality patient care, we want to encourage the recruitment of all physicians that are truly the best physicians to reduce that distinction between FM and IM in order to allow those best candidates to present, whether they are FM or IM.’ That’s all that we’re asking.”
Dr. Chaudhry emphasized that the preference for internal medicine trained physicians isn’t intentional. “It’s not as if the systems are trying to do it,” he said. “I think it is more like everybody needs to be educated. And through the platform of the Society of Hospital Medicine, I think we can make a difference. It will be a slow change, but we’ll have to keep on working on it.”
Dr. Odeti, Dr. McCurry, and Dr. Chaudhry have no relevant financial disclosures.
Outdated perceptions of family medicine
Outdated perceptions of family medicine
A family medicine trained doctor, fresh out of residency, visits a career website to scout out prospective hospitalist jobs in their region. As they scroll through the job listings, they come across one opportunity at a nearby hospital system that seems like a good fit. The listing offers a competitive salary and comprehensive benefits for the position, and mentions hospitalists in the department will have the opportunity to teach medical students.
The only problem? The position is for internal medicine trained doctors only. After searching through several more listings with the same internal medicine requirement, the pool of jobs available to the family medicine doctor seems much smaller.
When Robert M. Wachter, MD, MHM, and Lee Goldman, MD coined the term “hospitalist” in a 1996 New England Journal of Medicine article, hospitalists were primarily clinicians with an internal medicine background, filling the gap created by family medicine doctors who increasingly devoted their time to patients in their practice and spent less time rounding in the hospital.
As family medicine doctors have returned to hospital medicine, it has become difficult to find positions as hospitalists due to a preference by some recruiters and employers that favors internal medicine physicians over those who are trained in family medicine. The preference for internal medicine physicians is sometimes overt, such as a requirement on a job application. But the preference can also surface after a physician has already applied for a position, and they will then discover a recruiter is actually looking for someone with a background in internal medicine. In other cases, family medicine physicians find out after applying that applicants with a background in family medicine are considered, but they’re expected to have additional training or certification not listed on the job application.
The situation can even be as stark as a hospital system hiring an internal medicine doctor just out of residency over a family medicine doctor with years of experience as a board-certified physician. Hiring practices in large systems across multiple states sometimes don’t just favor internal medicine, they are entirely focused on internal medicine hospitalists, said experts who spoke with The Hospitalist.
Outdated perceptions of family medicine
Victoria McCurry, MD, current chair of the Society of Hospital Medicine’s family medicine Special Interest Group (SIG) Executive Committee and Faculty Director of Inpatient Services at UPMC McKeesport (Pa.) Family Medicine Residency, said hearsay inside the family medicine community influenced her first job search looking for hospitalist positions as a family medicine physician.
“I was intentional about choosing places that I assumed would be open to family medicine,” she said. “I avoided the downtown urban academic hospitals, the ones that had a large internal medicine residency and fellowship presence, because I assumed that they would not hire me.
“There’s a recognition that depending on the system that you’re in and their history with family medicine trained hospitalists, it can be difficult as a family physician to seek employment,” Dr. McCurry said.
“When I graduated from my residency in 2014, I did not have the same opportunities to be a hospitalist as an internal medicine resident would have,” said Shyam Odeti, MD, a family-practice-trained hospitalist who works at Ballad Health in Johnson City, Tenn. “The perception is family medicine physicians are not trained for hospitalist practice. It’s an old perception.”
This perception may have to do with the mindset of the leadership where a doctor has had residency training, according to Usman Chaudhry, MD, a family medicine hospitalist with Texas Health Physicians Group and leader of the National Advocacy subcommittee for the Family Medicine Executive Council in SHM. Residents trained in bigger university hospital systems where internal medicine (IM) residents do mostly inpatient – in addition to outpatient services – and family medicine (FM) residents do mostly outpatient – including pediatrics and ob/gyn clinics in addition to inpatient services – may believe that to be the case in other systems too, Dr. Chaudhry explained.
“When you go to community hospital residency programs, it’s totally different,” he said. “It all depends. If you have only family medicine residency in a community hospital, they tend to do all training of inpatient clinical medicine, as IM training would in any other program”
Dr. McCurry noted that there seems to be a persisting, mental assumption that as a family medicine doctor, you’re only going to be practicing outpatient only or maybe urgent care, which is historically just not the case. “If that’s ingrained within the local hospital system, then it will be difficult for that system to hire a family medicine-trained hospitalist,” she said.
Another source of outdated perceptions of family medicine come from hospital and institutional bylaws that have written internal medicine training in as a requirement for hospitalists. “In many bigger systems, and even in the smaller hospital community and regional hospitals, the bylaws of the hospitals were written approximately 20 years ago,” Dr. Chaudhry said.
Unless someone has advocated for updating a hospital or institution’s bylaws, they may have outdated requirements for hospitalists. “The situation right now is, in a lot of urban hospitals, they would be able to give a hospitalist position to internal medicine residents who just graduated, not even board certified, but they cannot give it to a hospitalist trained in family medicine who has worked for 10 years and is board certified, just because of the bylaws,” said Dr. Odeti who is also co-chair for the SHM National Advocacy subcommittee of hospitalists trained in family medicine. “There is no good rhyme or reason to it. It is just there and they haven’t changed it.”
Dr. Chaudhry added that no one provides an adequate reason for the bias during the hiring process. “If you ask the recruiter, they would say ‘the employer asked me [to do it this way].’ If you ask the employers, they say ‘the hospital’s bylaws say that.’ And then, we request changes to the hospital bylaws because you don’t have access to them. So the burden of responsibility falls on the shoulders of hospitalists in leadership positions to request equal privileges from the hospital boards for FM-trained hospitalists.”
Experience, education closes some gaps
Over the years, the American Board of Family Medicine (ABFM) and SHM have offered several opportunities for family medicine doctors to demonstrate their experience and training in hospital medicine. In 2010, ABFM began offering the Focused Recognition of Hospital Medicine board examination, together with the American Board of Internal Medicine. SHM also offers hospitalist fellowships and a designation of Fellow in Hospital Medicine (FHM) for health care professionals. In 2015, ABFM and SHM released a joint statement encouraging the growth of hospitalists trained in family medicine (HTFM) and outlining these opportunities.
These measures help fill a gap in both IM and FM training, but also appear to have some effect in convincing recruiters and employers to consider family medicine doctors for hospitalist positions. An abstract published at Hospital Medicine 2014 reviewed 252 hospitalist positions listed in journals and search engines attempted to document the disparities in job listings, the perceptions of physician recruiters, and how factors like experience, training, and certification impacted a family medicine physician’s likelihood to be considered for a position. HTFMs were explicitly mentioned as being eligible in 119 of 252 positions (47%). The investigators then sent surveys out to physician recruiters of the remaining 133 positions asking whether HTFMs were being considered for the position. The results of the survey showed 66% of the recruiters were open to HTFMs, while 34% of recruiters said they did not have a willingness to hire HTFMs.
That willingness to hire changed based on the level of experience, training, and certification. More than one-fourth (29%) of physician recruiters said institutional bylaws prevented hiring of HTFMs. If respondents earned a Recognition of Focused Practice in Hospital Medicine (RFPHM) board examination, 78% of physician recruiters would reconsider hiring the candidate. If the HTFM applicant had prior experience in hospital medicine, 87% of physician recruiters said they would consider the candidate. HTFMs who earned a Designation of Fellow in Hospital Medicine (FHM) from SHM would be reconsidered by 93% of physician recruiters who initially refused the HTFM candidate. All physician recruiters said they would reconsider if the candidate had a fellowship in hospital medicine.
However, to date, there is no official American College of Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)-recognized hospitalist board certification or designated specialty credentialing. This can lead to situations where family medicine trained physicians are applying for jobs without the necessary requirements for the position, because those requirements may not be immediately obvious when first applying to a position. “There’s often no specification until you apply and then are informed that you don’t qualify – ‘Oh, no, you haven’t completed a fellowship,’ or the added qualification in hospital medicine,” Dr. McCurry said.
The 2015 joint statement from AAFP and SHM asserts that “more than two-thirds of HTFMs are also involved in the training of residents and medical students, enhancing the skills of our future physicians.” But when HTFMs do find positions, they may be limited in other ways, such as being prohibited from serving on the faculty of internal medicine residency programs and teaching internal medicine residents. When Dr. Odeti was medical director for Johnston Memorial Hospital in Abingdon, Va., he said he encountered this issue.
“If you are a hospitalist who is internal medicine trained, then you can teach FM or IM, whereas if you’re family medicine trained, you cannot teach internal medicine residents,” he said. “What happened with me, I had to prioritize recruiting internal medicine residents over FM residents to be able to staff IM teaching faculty.”
A rule change has been lobbied by SHM, under the direction of SHM family medicine SIG former chair David Goldstein, MD, to address this issue that would allow HTFMs with a FPHM designation to teach IM residents. The change was quietly made by the ACGME Review Committee for Internal Medicine in 2017, Dr. McCurry said, but implementation of the change has been slow.
“Essentially, the change was made in 2017 to allow for family medicine trainied physicians who have the FPHM designation to teach IM residents, but this knowledge has not been widely dispersed or policies updated to clearly reflect this change,” Dr. McCurry said. “It is a significant change, however, because prior to that, there were explicit policies preventing a family medicine hospitalist from teaching internal medicine residents even if they were experienced.”
FM physicians uniquely suited for HM
Requirements aside, it is “arguably not the case” that family medicine physicians need these extra certifications and fellowships to serve as hospitalists, Dr. McCurry said. It is difficult to quantify IM and FM hospitalist quality outcomes due to challenges with attribution, Dr. Odeti noted. One 2007 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine looked at patient quality and cost of care across the hospitalist model, and family medicine practitioners providing inpatients care. The investigators found similar outcomes in the internist model and with family practitioners providing inpatient care. Dr. Odeti said this research supports “the fact that family medicine physicians are equally competent as internists in providing inpatient care.”
Dr. Odeti argued that family medicine training is valuable for work as a hospitalist. “Hospital medicine is a team sport. You have a quarterback, you have a wide receiver, you have a running back. Everybody has a role to play and everybody has their own strength,” he said.
Family medicine hospitalists are uniquely positioned to handle the shift within hospital medicine from volume to value-based care. “That does not depend solely on what we do within the hospital. It depends a lot on what we do for the patients as they get out of the hospital into the community,” he explained.
Family medicine hospitalists are also well prepared to handle the continuum of care for patients in the hospital. “In their training, FM hospitalists have their own patient panels and they have complete ownership of their patient in their training, so they are prepared because they know how to set up things for outpatients,” Dr. Odeti explained.
“Every hospitalist group needs to use the family medicine doctors to their advantage,” he said. “A family medicine trained hospitalist should be part of every good hospitalist group, is what I would say.”
HTFMs are growing within SHM
HTFMs are “all over,” being represented in smaller hospitals, larger hospitals, and university hospitals in every state. “But to reach those positions, they probably have to go over more hurdles and have fewer opportunities,” Dr. Chaudhry said.
There isn’t a completely accurate count of family medicine hospitalists in the United States. Out of an estimated 50,000 hospitalists in the U. S., about 16,000 hospitalists are members of SHM. A number of family medicine hospitalists may also take AAFP membership instead of SHM, Dr. Odeti explained.
However, there are a growing number of hospitalists within SHM with a family medicine background. In the 2007-2008 Society of Hospital Medicine Annual Survey, 3.7% of U.S. hospitalists claimed family medicine training. That number increased to 6.9% of physicians who answered the SHM membership data report in 2010.
A Medscape Hospitalist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report from 2019 estimates 17% of hospitalists are trained in family medicine. In the latest State of Hospital Medicine Report published in 2020, 38.6% of hospital medicine groups containing family medicine trained physicians were part of a university, medical school, or faculty practice; 79.6% did not have academic status; 83.8% were at a non-teaching hospital; 60.7% were in a group in a non-teaching service at a teaching hospital; and 52.8% were in a group at a combination teaching/non-teaching service at a teaching hospital.
Although the Report did not specify whether family medicine hospitalists were mainly in rural or urban areas, “some of us do practice in underserved area hospitals where you have the smaller ICU model, critical access hospitals, potentially dealing with a whole gamut of inpatient medicine from ER, to the hospital inpatient adult cases, to critical care level,” Dr. McCurry said.
“But then, there are a large number of us who practice in private groups or at large hospitals, academic centers around the country,” she added. “There’s a range of family medicine trained hospitalist practice areas.”
Equal recognition for HTFM in HM
The SHM family medicine SIG has been working to highlight the issue of hiring practices for HTFMs, and is taking a number of actions to bring greater awareness and recognition to family medicine hospitalists.
The family medicine SIG is looking at steps for requesting a new joint statement from ABFM and SHM focused on hiring practices for family medicine physicians as hospitalists. “I think it’s worth considering now that we’re at a point where we comprise about one-fifth of hospitalists as family medicine docs,” Dr. McCurry said. “Is it time to take that joint statement to the next step, and seek a review of how we can improve the balance of hiring in terms of favoring more balanced consideration now that there are a lot more family medicine trained hospitalists than historically?
“I think the call is really to help us all move to that next step in terms of identifying any of the lingering vestiges of expectation that are really no longer applicable to the hiring practices, or shouldn’t be,” she said.
The next step will be to ask hospitals with internal medicine only requirements for hospitalists to update their bylaws to include family medicine physicians when considering candidates for hospitalist positions. If SHM does not make a distinction to grant Fellow in Hospital Medicine status between internal medicine and family medicine trained hospitalists, “then there should not be any distinction, or there should not be any hindrance by the recruiters, by the bigger systems, as well as by the employers” in hiring a family medicine trained physician for a hospitalist position, Dr. Chaudhry said.
Dr. Odeti, who serves in several leadership roles within Ballad Health, describes the system as being friendly to HTFMs. About one-fourth of the hospitalists in Ballad Health are trained in family medicine. But when Dr. Odeti started his hospitalist practice, he was only one of a handful of HTFMs. He sees a future where the accomplishments and contributions of HTFMs will pave the way for future hospitalists. “Access into the urban hospitals is key, and I hope that SHM and the HTFM SIG will act as a catalyst for this change,” he said.
Colleagues of family medicine hospitalists, especially those in leadership positions at hospitals, can help by raising awareness, as can “those of our colleagues who sit on medical executive committees within their hospitals to review their bylaws, to see what the policies are, and encourage more competitiveness,” Dr. McCurry said. “Truly, the best candidate for the position, regardless of background and training, is what you want. You want the best colleagues for your fellow hospitalists. You want the best physician for your patients in the hospital.”
If training and all other things are equal, family medicine physicians should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis, she said. “I think that that puts the burden back on any good medical committee, and a good medical committee member who is an SHM member as well, to say, ‘If we are committed to quality patient care, we want to encourage the recruitment of all physicians that are truly the best physicians to reduce that distinction between FM and IM in order to allow those best candidates to present, whether they are FM or IM.’ That’s all that we’re asking.”
Dr. Chaudhry emphasized that the preference for internal medicine trained physicians isn’t intentional. “It’s not as if the systems are trying to do it,” he said. “I think it is more like everybody needs to be educated. And through the platform of the Society of Hospital Medicine, I think we can make a difference. It will be a slow change, but we’ll have to keep on working on it.”
Dr. Odeti, Dr. McCurry, and Dr. Chaudhry have no relevant financial disclosures.
A family medicine trained doctor, fresh out of residency, visits a career website to scout out prospective hospitalist jobs in their region. As they scroll through the job listings, they come across one opportunity at a nearby hospital system that seems like a good fit. The listing offers a competitive salary and comprehensive benefits for the position, and mentions hospitalists in the department will have the opportunity to teach medical students.
The only problem? The position is for internal medicine trained doctors only. After searching through several more listings with the same internal medicine requirement, the pool of jobs available to the family medicine doctor seems much smaller.
When Robert M. Wachter, MD, MHM, and Lee Goldman, MD coined the term “hospitalist” in a 1996 New England Journal of Medicine article, hospitalists were primarily clinicians with an internal medicine background, filling the gap created by family medicine doctors who increasingly devoted their time to patients in their practice and spent less time rounding in the hospital.
As family medicine doctors have returned to hospital medicine, it has become difficult to find positions as hospitalists due to a preference by some recruiters and employers that favors internal medicine physicians over those who are trained in family medicine. The preference for internal medicine physicians is sometimes overt, such as a requirement on a job application. But the preference can also surface after a physician has already applied for a position, and they will then discover a recruiter is actually looking for someone with a background in internal medicine. In other cases, family medicine physicians find out after applying that applicants with a background in family medicine are considered, but they’re expected to have additional training or certification not listed on the job application.
The situation can even be as stark as a hospital system hiring an internal medicine doctor just out of residency over a family medicine doctor with years of experience as a board-certified physician. Hiring practices in large systems across multiple states sometimes don’t just favor internal medicine, they are entirely focused on internal medicine hospitalists, said experts who spoke with The Hospitalist.
Outdated perceptions of family medicine
Victoria McCurry, MD, current chair of the Society of Hospital Medicine’s family medicine Special Interest Group (SIG) Executive Committee and Faculty Director of Inpatient Services at UPMC McKeesport (Pa.) Family Medicine Residency, said hearsay inside the family medicine community influenced her first job search looking for hospitalist positions as a family medicine physician.
“I was intentional about choosing places that I assumed would be open to family medicine,” she said. “I avoided the downtown urban academic hospitals, the ones that had a large internal medicine residency and fellowship presence, because I assumed that they would not hire me.
“There’s a recognition that depending on the system that you’re in and their history with family medicine trained hospitalists, it can be difficult as a family physician to seek employment,” Dr. McCurry said.
“When I graduated from my residency in 2014, I did not have the same opportunities to be a hospitalist as an internal medicine resident would have,” said Shyam Odeti, MD, a family-practice-trained hospitalist who works at Ballad Health in Johnson City, Tenn. “The perception is family medicine physicians are not trained for hospitalist practice. It’s an old perception.”
This perception may have to do with the mindset of the leadership where a doctor has had residency training, according to Usman Chaudhry, MD, a family medicine hospitalist with Texas Health Physicians Group and leader of the National Advocacy subcommittee for the Family Medicine Executive Council in SHM. Residents trained in bigger university hospital systems where internal medicine (IM) residents do mostly inpatient – in addition to outpatient services – and family medicine (FM) residents do mostly outpatient – including pediatrics and ob/gyn clinics in addition to inpatient services – may believe that to be the case in other systems too, Dr. Chaudhry explained.
“When you go to community hospital residency programs, it’s totally different,” he said. “It all depends. If you have only family medicine residency in a community hospital, they tend to do all training of inpatient clinical medicine, as IM training would in any other program”
Dr. McCurry noted that there seems to be a persisting, mental assumption that as a family medicine doctor, you’re only going to be practicing outpatient only or maybe urgent care, which is historically just not the case. “If that’s ingrained within the local hospital system, then it will be difficult for that system to hire a family medicine-trained hospitalist,” she said.
Another source of outdated perceptions of family medicine come from hospital and institutional bylaws that have written internal medicine training in as a requirement for hospitalists. “In many bigger systems, and even in the smaller hospital community and regional hospitals, the bylaws of the hospitals were written approximately 20 years ago,” Dr. Chaudhry said.
Unless someone has advocated for updating a hospital or institution’s bylaws, they may have outdated requirements for hospitalists. “The situation right now is, in a lot of urban hospitals, they would be able to give a hospitalist position to internal medicine residents who just graduated, not even board certified, but they cannot give it to a hospitalist trained in family medicine who has worked for 10 years and is board certified, just because of the bylaws,” said Dr. Odeti who is also co-chair for the SHM National Advocacy subcommittee of hospitalists trained in family medicine. “There is no good rhyme or reason to it. It is just there and they haven’t changed it.”
Dr. Chaudhry added that no one provides an adequate reason for the bias during the hiring process. “If you ask the recruiter, they would say ‘the employer asked me [to do it this way].’ If you ask the employers, they say ‘the hospital’s bylaws say that.’ And then, we request changes to the hospital bylaws because you don’t have access to them. So the burden of responsibility falls on the shoulders of hospitalists in leadership positions to request equal privileges from the hospital boards for FM-trained hospitalists.”
Experience, education closes some gaps
Over the years, the American Board of Family Medicine (ABFM) and SHM have offered several opportunities for family medicine doctors to demonstrate their experience and training in hospital medicine. In 2010, ABFM began offering the Focused Recognition of Hospital Medicine board examination, together with the American Board of Internal Medicine. SHM also offers hospitalist fellowships and a designation of Fellow in Hospital Medicine (FHM) for health care professionals. In 2015, ABFM and SHM released a joint statement encouraging the growth of hospitalists trained in family medicine (HTFM) and outlining these opportunities.
These measures help fill a gap in both IM and FM training, but also appear to have some effect in convincing recruiters and employers to consider family medicine doctors for hospitalist positions. An abstract published at Hospital Medicine 2014 reviewed 252 hospitalist positions listed in journals and search engines attempted to document the disparities in job listings, the perceptions of physician recruiters, and how factors like experience, training, and certification impacted a family medicine physician’s likelihood to be considered for a position. HTFMs were explicitly mentioned as being eligible in 119 of 252 positions (47%). The investigators then sent surveys out to physician recruiters of the remaining 133 positions asking whether HTFMs were being considered for the position. The results of the survey showed 66% of the recruiters were open to HTFMs, while 34% of recruiters said they did not have a willingness to hire HTFMs.
That willingness to hire changed based on the level of experience, training, and certification. More than one-fourth (29%) of physician recruiters said institutional bylaws prevented hiring of HTFMs. If respondents earned a Recognition of Focused Practice in Hospital Medicine (RFPHM) board examination, 78% of physician recruiters would reconsider hiring the candidate. If the HTFM applicant had prior experience in hospital medicine, 87% of physician recruiters said they would consider the candidate. HTFMs who earned a Designation of Fellow in Hospital Medicine (FHM) from SHM would be reconsidered by 93% of physician recruiters who initially refused the HTFM candidate. All physician recruiters said they would reconsider if the candidate had a fellowship in hospital medicine.
However, to date, there is no official American College of Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)-recognized hospitalist board certification or designated specialty credentialing. This can lead to situations where family medicine trained physicians are applying for jobs without the necessary requirements for the position, because those requirements may not be immediately obvious when first applying to a position. “There’s often no specification until you apply and then are informed that you don’t qualify – ‘Oh, no, you haven’t completed a fellowship,’ or the added qualification in hospital medicine,” Dr. McCurry said.
The 2015 joint statement from AAFP and SHM asserts that “more than two-thirds of HTFMs are also involved in the training of residents and medical students, enhancing the skills of our future physicians.” But when HTFMs do find positions, they may be limited in other ways, such as being prohibited from serving on the faculty of internal medicine residency programs and teaching internal medicine residents. When Dr. Odeti was medical director for Johnston Memorial Hospital in Abingdon, Va., he said he encountered this issue.
“If you are a hospitalist who is internal medicine trained, then you can teach FM or IM, whereas if you’re family medicine trained, you cannot teach internal medicine residents,” he said. “What happened with me, I had to prioritize recruiting internal medicine residents over FM residents to be able to staff IM teaching faculty.”
A rule change has been lobbied by SHM, under the direction of SHM family medicine SIG former chair David Goldstein, MD, to address this issue that would allow HTFMs with a FPHM designation to teach IM residents. The change was quietly made by the ACGME Review Committee for Internal Medicine in 2017, Dr. McCurry said, but implementation of the change has been slow.
“Essentially, the change was made in 2017 to allow for family medicine trainied physicians who have the FPHM designation to teach IM residents, but this knowledge has not been widely dispersed or policies updated to clearly reflect this change,” Dr. McCurry said. “It is a significant change, however, because prior to that, there were explicit policies preventing a family medicine hospitalist from teaching internal medicine residents even if they were experienced.”
FM physicians uniquely suited for HM
Requirements aside, it is “arguably not the case” that family medicine physicians need these extra certifications and fellowships to serve as hospitalists, Dr. McCurry said. It is difficult to quantify IM and FM hospitalist quality outcomes due to challenges with attribution, Dr. Odeti noted. One 2007 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine looked at patient quality and cost of care across the hospitalist model, and family medicine practitioners providing inpatients care. The investigators found similar outcomes in the internist model and with family practitioners providing inpatient care. Dr. Odeti said this research supports “the fact that family medicine physicians are equally competent as internists in providing inpatient care.”
Dr. Odeti argued that family medicine training is valuable for work as a hospitalist. “Hospital medicine is a team sport. You have a quarterback, you have a wide receiver, you have a running back. Everybody has a role to play and everybody has their own strength,” he said.
Family medicine hospitalists are uniquely positioned to handle the shift within hospital medicine from volume to value-based care. “That does not depend solely on what we do within the hospital. It depends a lot on what we do for the patients as they get out of the hospital into the community,” he explained.
Family medicine hospitalists are also well prepared to handle the continuum of care for patients in the hospital. “In their training, FM hospitalists have their own patient panels and they have complete ownership of their patient in their training, so they are prepared because they know how to set up things for outpatients,” Dr. Odeti explained.
“Every hospitalist group needs to use the family medicine doctors to their advantage,” he said. “A family medicine trained hospitalist should be part of every good hospitalist group, is what I would say.”
HTFMs are growing within SHM
HTFMs are “all over,” being represented in smaller hospitals, larger hospitals, and university hospitals in every state. “But to reach those positions, they probably have to go over more hurdles and have fewer opportunities,” Dr. Chaudhry said.
There isn’t a completely accurate count of family medicine hospitalists in the United States. Out of an estimated 50,000 hospitalists in the U. S., about 16,000 hospitalists are members of SHM. A number of family medicine hospitalists may also take AAFP membership instead of SHM, Dr. Odeti explained.
However, there are a growing number of hospitalists within SHM with a family medicine background. In the 2007-2008 Society of Hospital Medicine Annual Survey, 3.7% of U.S. hospitalists claimed family medicine training. That number increased to 6.9% of physicians who answered the SHM membership data report in 2010.
A Medscape Hospitalist Lifestyle, Happiness & Burnout Report from 2019 estimates 17% of hospitalists are trained in family medicine. In the latest State of Hospital Medicine Report published in 2020, 38.6% of hospital medicine groups containing family medicine trained physicians were part of a university, medical school, or faculty practice; 79.6% did not have academic status; 83.8% were at a non-teaching hospital; 60.7% were in a group in a non-teaching service at a teaching hospital; and 52.8% were in a group at a combination teaching/non-teaching service at a teaching hospital.
Although the Report did not specify whether family medicine hospitalists were mainly in rural or urban areas, “some of us do practice in underserved area hospitals where you have the smaller ICU model, critical access hospitals, potentially dealing with a whole gamut of inpatient medicine from ER, to the hospital inpatient adult cases, to critical care level,” Dr. McCurry said.
“But then, there are a large number of us who practice in private groups or at large hospitals, academic centers around the country,” she added. “There’s a range of family medicine trained hospitalist practice areas.”
Equal recognition for HTFM in HM
The SHM family medicine SIG has been working to highlight the issue of hiring practices for HTFMs, and is taking a number of actions to bring greater awareness and recognition to family medicine hospitalists.
The family medicine SIG is looking at steps for requesting a new joint statement from ABFM and SHM focused on hiring practices for family medicine physicians as hospitalists. “I think it’s worth considering now that we’re at a point where we comprise about one-fifth of hospitalists as family medicine docs,” Dr. McCurry said. “Is it time to take that joint statement to the next step, and seek a review of how we can improve the balance of hiring in terms of favoring more balanced consideration now that there are a lot more family medicine trained hospitalists than historically?
“I think the call is really to help us all move to that next step in terms of identifying any of the lingering vestiges of expectation that are really no longer applicable to the hiring practices, or shouldn’t be,” she said.
The next step will be to ask hospitals with internal medicine only requirements for hospitalists to update their bylaws to include family medicine physicians when considering candidates for hospitalist positions. If SHM does not make a distinction to grant Fellow in Hospital Medicine status between internal medicine and family medicine trained hospitalists, “then there should not be any distinction, or there should not be any hindrance by the recruiters, by the bigger systems, as well as by the employers” in hiring a family medicine trained physician for a hospitalist position, Dr. Chaudhry said.
Dr. Odeti, who serves in several leadership roles within Ballad Health, describes the system as being friendly to HTFMs. About one-fourth of the hospitalists in Ballad Health are trained in family medicine. But when Dr. Odeti started his hospitalist practice, he was only one of a handful of HTFMs. He sees a future where the accomplishments and contributions of HTFMs will pave the way for future hospitalists. “Access into the urban hospitals is key, and I hope that SHM and the HTFM SIG will act as a catalyst for this change,” he said.
Colleagues of family medicine hospitalists, especially those in leadership positions at hospitals, can help by raising awareness, as can “those of our colleagues who sit on medical executive committees within their hospitals to review their bylaws, to see what the policies are, and encourage more competitiveness,” Dr. McCurry said. “Truly, the best candidate for the position, regardless of background and training, is what you want. You want the best colleagues for your fellow hospitalists. You want the best physician for your patients in the hospital.”
If training and all other things are equal, family medicine physicians should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis, she said. “I think that that puts the burden back on any good medical committee, and a good medical committee member who is an SHM member as well, to say, ‘If we are committed to quality patient care, we want to encourage the recruitment of all physicians that are truly the best physicians to reduce that distinction between FM and IM in order to allow those best candidates to present, whether they are FM or IM.’ That’s all that we’re asking.”
Dr. Chaudhry emphasized that the preference for internal medicine trained physicians isn’t intentional. “It’s not as if the systems are trying to do it,” he said. “I think it is more like everybody needs to be educated. And through the platform of the Society of Hospital Medicine, I think we can make a difference. It will be a slow change, but we’ll have to keep on working on it.”
Dr. Odeti, Dr. McCurry, and Dr. Chaudhry have no relevant financial disclosures.
Getting to secure text messaging in health care
Health care teams are searching for solutions
Hospitalists and health care teams struggle with issues related to text messaging in the workplace. “It’s happening whether an institution has a secure text messaging platform or not,” said Philip Hagedorn, MD, MBI, associate chief medical information officer at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center.
“Many places reacted to this reality by procuring a solution – take your pick of secure text messaging platforms – and implementing it, but bypassed an opportunity to think about how we tailor the use of this culturally ubiquitous medium to the health care setting,” he said.It doesn’t work to just drop a secure text messaging platform into clinical systems and expect that health care practitioners will know how to use them appropriately, Dr. Hagedorn says. “The way we use text messaging in our lives outside health care inevitably bleeds into how we use the medium at work, but it shouldn’t. The needs are different and the stakes are higher for communication in the health care setting.”
In a paper looking at the issue, Dr. Hagedorn and co-authors laid out critical areas of concern, such as text messaging becoming a form of alarm fatigue and also increasing the likelihood of communication error.
“It’s my hope that fellow hospitalists can use this as an opportunity to think deeply about how we communicate in health care,” he said. “If we don’t think critically about how and where something like text messaging should be used in medicine, we risk facing unintended consequences for our patients.”The article discusses several steps for mitigating the risks laid out, including proactive surveillance and targeted training. “These are starting points, and I’m sure there are plenty of other creative solutions out there. We wanted to get the conversation going. We’d love to hear from others who face similar issues or have come up with interesting solutions.”
Reference
1. Hagedorn PA, et al. Secure Text Messaging in Healthcare: Latent Threats and Opportunities to Improve Patient Safety. J Hosp Med. 2020 June;15(6):378-380. Published Online First 2019 Sept 18. doi: 10.12788/jhm.3305
Health care teams are searching for solutions
Health care teams are searching for solutions
Hospitalists and health care teams struggle with issues related to text messaging in the workplace. “It’s happening whether an institution has a secure text messaging platform or not,” said Philip Hagedorn, MD, MBI, associate chief medical information officer at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center.
“Many places reacted to this reality by procuring a solution – take your pick of secure text messaging platforms – and implementing it, but bypassed an opportunity to think about how we tailor the use of this culturally ubiquitous medium to the health care setting,” he said.It doesn’t work to just drop a secure text messaging platform into clinical systems and expect that health care practitioners will know how to use them appropriately, Dr. Hagedorn says. “The way we use text messaging in our lives outside health care inevitably bleeds into how we use the medium at work, but it shouldn’t. The needs are different and the stakes are higher for communication in the health care setting.”
In a paper looking at the issue, Dr. Hagedorn and co-authors laid out critical areas of concern, such as text messaging becoming a form of alarm fatigue and also increasing the likelihood of communication error.
“It’s my hope that fellow hospitalists can use this as an opportunity to think deeply about how we communicate in health care,” he said. “If we don’t think critically about how and where something like text messaging should be used in medicine, we risk facing unintended consequences for our patients.”The article discusses several steps for mitigating the risks laid out, including proactive surveillance and targeted training. “These are starting points, and I’m sure there are plenty of other creative solutions out there. We wanted to get the conversation going. We’d love to hear from others who face similar issues or have come up with interesting solutions.”
Reference
1. Hagedorn PA, et al. Secure Text Messaging in Healthcare: Latent Threats and Opportunities to Improve Patient Safety. J Hosp Med. 2020 June;15(6):378-380. Published Online First 2019 Sept 18. doi: 10.12788/jhm.3305
Hospitalists and health care teams struggle with issues related to text messaging in the workplace. “It’s happening whether an institution has a secure text messaging platform or not,” said Philip Hagedorn, MD, MBI, associate chief medical information officer at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center.
“Many places reacted to this reality by procuring a solution – take your pick of secure text messaging platforms – and implementing it, but bypassed an opportunity to think about how we tailor the use of this culturally ubiquitous medium to the health care setting,” he said.It doesn’t work to just drop a secure text messaging platform into clinical systems and expect that health care practitioners will know how to use them appropriately, Dr. Hagedorn says. “The way we use text messaging in our lives outside health care inevitably bleeds into how we use the medium at work, but it shouldn’t. The needs are different and the stakes are higher for communication in the health care setting.”
In a paper looking at the issue, Dr. Hagedorn and co-authors laid out critical areas of concern, such as text messaging becoming a form of alarm fatigue and also increasing the likelihood of communication error.
“It’s my hope that fellow hospitalists can use this as an opportunity to think deeply about how we communicate in health care,” he said. “If we don’t think critically about how and where something like text messaging should be used in medicine, we risk facing unintended consequences for our patients.”The article discusses several steps for mitigating the risks laid out, including proactive surveillance and targeted training. “These are starting points, and I’m sure there are plenty of other creative solutions out there. We wanted to get the conversation going. We’d love to hear from others who face similar issues or have come up with interesting solutions.”
Reference
1. Hagedorn PA, et al. Secure Text Messaging in Healthcare: Latent Threats and Opportunities to Improve Patient Safety. J Hosp Med. 2020 June;15(6):378-380. Published Online First 2019 Sept 18. doi: 10.12788/jhm.3305
Rounding to make the hospital go ‘round
Hospitalists and performance incentive measures
No matter how you spin it, hospitalists are key to making the world of the hospital go ‘round, making their daily work of paramount interest to both hospitals and health systems.
Hospitalists are the primary attending physicians for patients in the hospital while also bridging the patient and their needs to the services of other subspecialists, allied health professionals, and when needed, postacute services. In this way, patients are efficiently moved along the acute care experience with multiple process and outcome measures being recorded along the way.
Some of these common performance incentive measures are determined by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services while others may be of interest to third party payers. Often surrogate markers of process metrics (i.e. order set usage for certain diagnoses) are measured and incentivized as a way of directionally measuring small steps that each hospitalist can reliably control toward a presumably associated improvement in mortality or readmissions, for instance. Still other measures such as length of stay or timely completion of documentation have more to do with hospital operations, regulatory governance, and finance.
There are a variety of performance incentive metrics reported in the 2020 SoHM Report. Survey respondents could choose all measures that applied as compensation measures for their group in the past year. The most common metrics reported include patient satisfaction (48.7%), citizenship (45.8%), accuracy or timeliness of documentation (32.8%), and clinical process measures (30.7%).
It is important to acknowledge that most of these metrics are objective measurements and can be measured down to the individual physician. However, some of the objective measures, such as patient satisfaction data, must rely on agreed upon methods of attribution – which can include anything from attributing based on admitting physician, discharging attending, or the attending with the greatest number of days (i.e. daily charges) seeing the patient. Because of challenges with attribution, groups may opt for group measurement of metrics for some of the compensation metrics where attribution is most muddy.
For performance incentive metrics that may be more subjective, such as citizenship, it is important for hospitalist leaders to consider having a method of determining a person’s contribution with a rubric as well as some shared decision making among a committee of leaders or team members to promote fairness in compensation.
Hospital leaders must also recognize that what is measured will lead to “performance” in that area. The perfect example here is the “early morning discharge time/orders” which is a compensation metric in 27.6% of hospitalist groups. Most agree that having some early discharges, up to maybe 25%-30% of the total number of discharges before noon, can be helpful with hospital throughput. The trick here is that if a patient can be discharged that early, it is likely that some of those patients could have gone home the evening prior. It is important for hospitalist physician leaders and administrators to think about the behaviors that are incentivized in compensation metrics to ensure that the result is indeed helpful.
Other hospitalist compensation metrics such as readmissions are most effectively addressed if there are multiple physician teams working toward the same metric. Hospitalist work does effect readmissions within the first 7 days of discharge based on available evidence.1 Preventing readmissions from days 8-30 following discharge are more amenable to outpatient and home-based interventions. Also, effective readmission work involves collaboration among the emergency physician team, surgeons, primary care, and subspecialty physicians. So while having this as a compensation metric will gain the attention of hospitalist physicians, the work will be most effective when it is shared with other teams.
Overall, performance incentive metrics for hospitalists can be effective in allowing hospitals and hospitalist groups to partner toward achieving important outcomes for patients. Easy and frequent sharing of data on meaningful metrics with hospitalists is important to effect change. Also, hospital leadership can facilitate collaboration among nursing and multiple physician groups to promote a team culture with hospitalists in achieving goals related to performance incentive metrics.
Dr. McNeal is the division director of inpatient medicine at Baylor Scott & White Medical Center in Temple, Tex.
Reference
1. Graham, et al. Preventability of Early Versus Late Hospital Readmissions in a National Cohort of General Medicine Patients. Ann Intern Med. 2018 Jun 5;168(11):766-74.
Hospitalists and performance incentive measures
Hospitalists and performance incentive measures
No matter how you spin it, hospitalists are key to making the world of the hospital go ‘round, making their daily work of paramount interest to both hospitals and health systems.
Hospitalists are the primary attending physicians for patients in the hospital while also bridging the patient and their needs to the services of other subspecialists, allied health professionals, and when needed, postacute services. In this way, patients are efficiently moved along the acute care experience with multiple process and outcome measures being recorded along the way.
Some of these common performance incentive measures are determined by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services while others may be of interest to third party payers. Often surrogate markers of process metrics (i.e. order set usage for certain diagnoses) are measured and incentivized as a way of directionally measuring small steps that each hospitalist can reliably control toward a presumably associated improvement in mortality or readmissions, for instance. Still other measures such as length of stay or timely completion of documentation have more to do with hospital operations, regulatory governance, and finance.
There are a variety of performance incentive metrics reported in the 2020 SoHM Report. Survey respondents could choose all measures that applied as compensation measures for their group in the past year. The most common metrics reported include patient satisfaction (48.7%), citizenship (45.8%), accuracy or timeliness of documentation (32.8%), and clinical process measures (30.7%).
It is important to acknowledge that most of these metrics are objective measurements and can be measured down to the individual physician. However, some of the objective measures, such as patient satisfaction data, must rely on agreed upon methods of attribution – which can include anything from attributing based on admitting physician, discharging attending, or the attending with the greatest number of days (i.e. daily charges) seeing the patient. Because of challenges with attribution, groups may opt for group measurement of metrics for some of the compensation metrics where attribution is most muddy.
For performance incentive metrics that may be more subjective, such as citizenship, it is important for hospitalist leaders to consider having a method of determining a person’s contribution with a rubric as well as some shared decision making among a committee of leaders or team members to promote fairness in compensation.
Hospital leaders must also recognize that what is measured will lead to “performance” in that area. The perfect example here is the “early morning discharge time/orders” which is a compensation metric in 27.6% of hospitalist groups. Most agree that having some early discharges, up to maybe 25%-30% of the total number of discharges before noon, can be helpful with hospital throughput. The trick here is that if a patient can be discharged that early, it is likely that some of those patients could have gone home the evening prior. It is important for hospitalist physician leaders and administrators to think about the behaviors that are incentivized in compensation metrics to ensure that the result is indeed helpful.
Other hospitalist compensation metrics such as readmissions are most effectively addressed if there are multiple physician teams working toward the same metric. Hospitalist work does effect readmissions within the first 7 days of discharge based on available evidence.1 Preventing readmissions from days 8-30 following discharge are more amenable to outpatient and home-based interventions. Also, effective readmission work involves collaboration among the emergency physician team, surgeons, primary care, and subspecialty physicians. So while having this as a compensation metric will gain the attention of hospitalist physicians, the work will be most effective when it is shared with other teams.
Overall, performance incentive metrics for hospitalists can be effective in allowing hospitals and hospitalist groups to partner toward achieving important outcomes for patients. Easy and frequent sharing of data on meaningful metrics with hospitalists is important to effect change. Also, hospital leadership can facilitate collaboration among nursing and multiple physician groups to promote a team culture with hospitalists in achieving goals related to performance incentive metrics.
Dr. McNeal is the division director of inpatient medicine at Baylor Scott & White Medical Center in Temple, Tex.
Reference
1. Graham, et al. Preventability of Early Versus Late Hospital Readmissions in a National Cohort of General Medicine Patients. Ann Intern Med. 2018 Jun 5;168(11):766-74.
No matter how you spin it, hospitalists are key to making the world of the hospital go ‘round, making their daily work of paramount interest to both hospitals and health systems.
Hospitalists are the primary attending physicians for patients in the hospital while also bridging the patient and their needs to the services of other subspecialists, allied health professionals, and when needed, postacute services. In this way, patients are efficiently moved along the acute care experience with multiple process and outcome measures being recorded along the way.
Some of these common performance incentive measures are determined by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services while others may be of interest to third party payers. Often surrogate markers of process metrics (i.e. order set usage for certain diagnoses) are measured and incentivized as a way of directionally measuring small steps that each hospitalist can reliably control toward a presumably associated improvement in mortality or readmissions, for instance. Still other measures such as length of stay or timely completion of documentation have more to do with hospital operations, regulatory governance, and finance.
There are a variety of performance incentive metrics reported in the 2020 SoHM Report. Survey respondents could choose all measures that applied as compensation measures for their group in the past year. The most common metrics reported include patient satisfaction (48.7%), citizenship (45.8%), accuracy or timeliness of documentation (32.8%), and clinical process measures (30.7%).
It is important to acknowledge that most of these metrics are objective measurements and can be measured down to the individual physician. However, some of the objective measures, such as patient satisfaction data, must rely on agreed upon methods of attribution – which can include anything from attributing based on admitting physician, discharging attending, or the attending with the greatest number of days (i.e. daily charges) seeing the patient. Because of challenges with attribution, groups may opt for group measurement of metrics for some of the compensation metrics where attribution is most muddy.
For performance incentive metrics that may be more subjective, such as citizenship, it is important for hospitalist leaders to consider having a method of determining a person’s contribution with a rubric as well as some shared decision making among a committee of leaders or team members to promote fairness in compensation.
Hospital leaders must also recognize that what is measured will lead to “performance” in that area. The perfect example here is the “early morning discharge time/orders” which is a compensation metric in 27.6% of hospitalist groups. Most agree that having some early discharges, up to maybe 25%-30% of the total number of discharges before noon, can be helpful with hospital throughput. The trick here is that if a patient can be discharged that early, it is likely that some of those patients could have gone home the evening prior. It is important for hospitalist physician leaders and administrators to think about the behaviors that are incentivized in compensation metrics to ensure that the result is indeed helpful.
Other hospitalist compensation metrics such as readmissions are most effectively addressed if there are multiple physician teams working toward the same metric. Hospitalist work does effect readmissions within the first 7 days of discharge based on available evidence.1 Preventing readmissions from days 8-30 following discharge are more amenable to outpatient and home-based interventions. Also, effective readmission work involves collaboration among the emergency physician team, surgeons, primary care, and subspecialty physicians. So while having this as a compensation metric will gain the attention of hospitalist physicians, the work will be most effective when it is shared with other teams.
Overall, performance incentive metrics for hospitalists can be effective in allowing hospitals and hospitalist groups to partner toward achieving important outcomes for patients. Easy and frequent sharing of data on meaningful metrics with hospitalists is important to effect change. Also, hospital leadership can facilitate collaboration among nursing and multiple physician groups to promote a team culture with hospitalists in achieving goals related to performance incentive metrics.
Dr. McNeal is the division director of inpatient medicine at Baylor Scott & White Medical Center in Temple, Tex.
Reference
1. Graham, et al. Preventability of Early Versus Late Hospital Readmissions in a National Cohort of General Medicine Patients. Ann Intern Med. 2018 Jun 5;168(11):766-74.