Twenty-Four-Seven

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By  |  August 7, 2011 | 

Two recent articles, one from The New York Times, the other from The Hospitalist, initiated some 24/7 staffing issue rumination on my behalf.  It stems originally from a recent op-ed by Lucian Leape:

“Given the accrediting council’s reluctance to act, the federal government needs to get tougher. If we are serious about curbing the tide of injuries stemming from medical errors, Medicare should make its funding of graduate medical education contingent on hospitals’ limiting work hours. We can’t afford to wait another 40 years.”

How do the aforementioned pieces resonate with the above quote?

The NYT article, well written, examines pediatric training, errors that stem from doctor “fatigue,” and the root causes behind these errors—presumably due to burdensome hours and the legacy of educational norms of decades past.  The author, chief of pediatric cardiology at UMass Medical School, cites the evidence before and after implementation of trainee work hour restrictions in 2003 (not overwhelmingly positive incidentally), and concludes that it may not be the stretch worked—although this is a factor, but how information is communicated doc to doc, and shift to shift.  This is not news to hospitalists.

The urgency of 24/7 hospitalist coverage to remedy the “problem,” as discussed in The Hospitalist feature, does not offer many solutions.  It does expose the problems hospitals will face as work force and dollars become scarcer.  That is only story subtext and not the primary message however.  For the casual reader, the crux of the report is “hospital medicine is the answer.”

I am undecided.

The piece speaks of recruitment difficulties, the undesirability of night work, the need for mid-levels (who comprise sizable portion of overnight staffing), and the dependency of programs on the coveted nocturnalist, who, if removed from the schedule, would cause chaos.  Nevertheless, again, “hospitalists will get the job done.”  I say, “where is the beef?”

For those with a “24/7 fix” prescription pad, and their intentions are well founded and sound, I am unsure how to implement resolves.  Others similarly share my view:

“That’s the commonsense part.  The hopeless part is that Long and Vaswami, both affiliated with the Institute for Healthcare Optimization, seem to believe that doctors, nurses and hospital execs will read their article and then spontaneously volunteer to work the weekend shift.”

We, physicians on the frontlines of acute care, comprehend what is at stake, the inherent flaws in our fragmented system, and the solutions needed, that is, if we lived in a perfect world.

We do not.

Here are my reflections:

  • Despite pleas for an increase in our physician workforce (AAMC—120K+), I cannot account for the needed funds, both to train, and pay, additional doctors to ramp up coverage.  In 2011 dollars, you can visualize the shortfall: 120,000 doctors x $200,000/year average .  Yes, allocation, efficiency, etc., all need consideration, and the calculation is beyond rough, but you get the idea.  Our country is in fiscal trouble and this is an improbable sell.  Either we train fewer cardiologists or radiologists, pay providers less, use trainees or mid-levels, or improve overnight and weekend coverage in ways undiscovered via technology and systems improvement.  More docs in the hospital mean less in the field, and those who evaluate physician workforce allocation must take 24/7 staffing into account when and if the chessboard pieces are rearranged.
  • On training more physicians, to additionally augment above, note the current physician supply in our country versus other OECD nations.  We are not laggards, and the U.S. as outlier is not resonant:

  • In speaking with ER colleagues, I am not persuaded that overnight and stuttered scheduling is maintainable long-term.  For some, emergency medicine finds individuals, and for others, it is the opposite—but it is a unique lifestyle, as is 24/7, shift-based hospital medicine (HM).  The question is, is it sustainable, and are there enough physicians with the “appropriate” DNA code to fulfill the needs of continuous hospital staffing.  Query physicians if they crave nights and weekends, and the answer is often no.  Which gets us to incentives, and how to make the transition if the system demands what most stakeholders do not desire?
  • I am willing to forgo a percentage of my salary if I knew it would produce a sturdier primary care infrastructure, more investment in preventative and population health, and targeted reductions in health disparities.  For me, this is fact, even gospel.  However, if you want individuals to work  disagreeable hours, there is a premium attached.  It might be hours toiled, or currency, but in the end, there is no difference (time is money, right?), and most folks seek parity.
  • This gets back to my original point: the labor force will not expand (assuming workforce allocation and pay is not overhauled significantly), and dollars are in short supply, especially for hospitals.  Convincing enough physicians to pursue HM as a career path, so, a) there is a critical mass of HM certified persons in the realm (MOC and what follows), b) that the movement does not develop on a shaky foundation, and c) we actually deliver what we promise, i.e., better value. The most recent AIM study on HM efficiency, while not the last word, is a sobering factual on what might be a movement utilizing hobbyists and non-committed HM practitioners.  That is a leap however, which I acknowledge.  Nonetheless, lack of organization in many programs played a role in the findings, and that I am certain.
  • American exceptionalism aside, how do systems in the Netherlands, UK, Germany, Canada, France and Switzerland manage the overnight, 24/7 staffing dilemma?  Is there on-site physician coverage at all times?  Are their adverse event rates lower?  Do they suffer transition problems similar to the United States?  What do they pay doctors with this scheduling model, and relative to primary, ER, and subspecialty docs, what kind of work-life balance and salary does their inpatient staff command?  This would be helpful information.

I hope to revisit this topic in the future, but I am uncertain, if given current constraints as mentioned above, the field of HM will continue to grow if lifestyle* and salary do not keep pace or meet expectations.  We must be careful what we wish, or what we think we wish for–because the genie, once out of the bottle, is not slinking back in straightforwardly.

* The retort, “no one twisted your arm to practice medicine” is the incorrect rejoinder.  If you wish to think or say it, fine, but writing it on the bathroom wall will not solve the dilemma.  We are all human and this issue is real; disregarding it is the greater gaff.

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3 Comments

  1. rachel August 8, 2011 at 9:45 am - Reply

    Great post Brad. I don’t know what’s going to happen in the future. I think that we are going to have to make excellent in handoffs and communication between providers as important when we evaluate docs performance as RVU’s and core measures. I think we need to find ways to make hospitalists feel ownership of their group and make it a career docs want to stay in for the long haul. In a way I wish we could go the way of ER docs schedules and hours but I think that may not work because of continuity issues.

  2. Joe Miller August 8, 2011 at 4:36 pm - Reply

    Provocative Brad. Too few of the thinkers are discussing this issue and too few of the researchers are evaluating the options. The challenges of 24/7 coverage and in-hospital handoffs needs more attention.

  3. Twenty-Four Seven | Care And Cost August 10, 2011 at 10:02 am - Reply

    […] posted 8/07/11 on The Hospitalist […]

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About the Author: Bradley Flansbaum

Bradley Flansbaum, DO, MPH, MHM works for Geisinger Health System in Danville, PA in both the divisions of hospital medicine and population health. He began working as a hospitalist in 1996, at the inception of the hospital medicine movement. He is a founding member of the Society of Hospital Medicine and served as a board member and officer. He speaks nationally in promoting hospital medicine and has presented at many statewide meetings and conferences. He is also actively involved in house staff education. Currently, he serves on the SHM Public Policy Committee and has an interest in payment policy, healthcare market competition, health disparities, cost-effectiveness analysis, and pain and palliative care. He is SHM’s delegate for the AMA House of Delegates. Dr. Flansbaum received his undergraduate degree from Union College in Schenectady, NY and attended medical school at the New York College of Osteopathic Medicine. He completed his residency and chief residency in Internal Medicine at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New York. He received his M.P.H. in Health Policy and Management at Columbia University. He is a political junky, and loves to cook, stay fit, read non-fiction, listen to many genres of music, and is a resident of Danville, PA.

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