Erschienen in:
01.05.2010 | Original Article
Procedures Performed by Hospitalist and Non-hospitalist General Internists
verfasst von:
Rajiv Thakkar, MD, Scott M. Wright, MD, Patrick Alguire, MD, Robert S. Wigton, MD, Romsai T. Boonyasai, MD, MPH
Erschienen in:
Journal of General Internal Medicine
|
Ausgabe 5/2010
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Abstract
BACKGROUND
In caring exclusively for inpatients, hospitalists are expected to perform hospital procedures. The type and frequency of procedures they perform are not well characterized.
OBJECTIVES
To determine which procedures hospitalists perform; to compare procedures performed by hospitalists and non-hospitalists; and to describe factors associated with hospitalists performing inpatient procedures.
DESIGN
Cross-sectional survey.
PARTICIPANTS
National sample of general internist members of the American College of Physicians.
METHODS
We characterized respondents to a national survey of general internists as hospitalists and non-hospitalists based on time-activity criteria. We compared hospitalists and non-hospitalists in relation to how many SHM core procedures they performed. Analyses explored whether hospitalists’ demographic characteristics, practice setting, and income structure influenced the performance of procedures.
RESULTS
Of 1,059 respondents, 175 were classified as “hospitalists”. Eleven percent of hospitalists performed all 9 core procedures compared with 3% of non-hospitalists. Hospitalists also reported higher procedural volumes in the previous year for 7 of the 9 procedures, including lumbar puncture (median of 5 by hospitalists vs. 2 for non-hospitalists), abdominal paracentesis (5 vs. 2), thoracenteses (5 vs. 2) and central line placement (5.5 vs. 3). Performing a greater variety of core procedures was associated with total time in patient care, but not time in hospital care, year of medical school graduation, practice location, or income structure. Multivariate analysis found no independent association between demographic factors and performing all 9 core procedures.
CONCLUSIONS
Hospitalists perform inpatient procedures more often and at higher volumes than non-hospitalists. Yet many do not perform procedures that are designated as hospitalist “core competencies.”