TY - JOUR
T1 - Non-housestaff medicine services in academic centers
T2 - Models and challenges
AU - Sehgal, Niraj L.
AU - Shah, Hiren M.
AU - Parekh, Vikas I.
AU - Roy, Christopher L.
AU - Williams, Mark V.
PY - 2008/5
Y1 - 2008/5
N2 - Non-housestaff medicine services are growing rapidly in academic medical centers (AMCs), partly driven by efforts to comply with resident duty hour restrictions. Hospitalists have emerged as a solution to providing these services given their commitment to delivering efficient and high-quality care and the field's rapid growth. However, limited evidence is available on designing these services, including the similarities and differences of existing ones. We describe nonhousestaff medicine services at 5 AMCs in order to share our experiences and outline important considerations in service development. We discuss common challenges in building and sustaining these models along with local institutional factors that affect decision making. Keys to success include ensuring an equitable system for scheduling and staffing, fostering opportunities for scholarly activities and academic promotion (defining the "academic hospitalist"), and providing compensation that supports recruitment and retention of hospitalists. With further work hour restrictions expected in the future and increased requests for surgical comanagement, the relationship between AMCs and hospitalists will continue to evolve. To succeed in developing hospitalist faculty who follow long careers in hospital medicine, academic leadership must carefully plan for and evaluate the methods of providing these clinical services while expanding on our academic mission.
AB - Non-housestaff medicine services are growing rapidly in academic medical centers (AMCs), partly driven by efforts to comply with resident duty hour restrictions. Hospitalists have emerged as a solution to providing these services given their commitment to delivering efficient and high-quality care and the field's rapid growth. However, limited evidence is available on designing these services, including the similarities and differences of existing ones. We describe nonhousestaff medicine services at 5 AMCs in order to share our experiences and outline important considerations in service development. We discuss common challenges in building and sustaining these models along with local institutional factors that affect decision making. Keys to success include ensuring an equitable system for scheduling and staffing, fostering opportunities for scholarly activities and academic promotion (defining the "academic hospitalist"), and providing compensation that supports recruitment and retention of hospitalists. With further work hour restrictions expected in the future and increased requests for surgical comanagement, the relationship between AMCs and hospitalists will continue to evolve. To succeed in developing hospitalist faculty who follow long careers in hospital medicine, academic leadership must carefully plan for and evaluate the methods of providing these clinical services while expanding on our academic mission.
KW - Academic medical centers
KW - Hospitalists
KW - Non-housestaff services
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=48349148271&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/jhm.311
DO - 10.1002/jhm.311
M3 - Article
C2 - 18571780
AN - SCOPUS:48349148271
SN - 1553-5592
VL - 3
SP - 247
EP - 255
JO - Journal of hospital medicine
JF - Journal of hospital medicine
IS - 3
ER -