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- Attending Physician
I thought the same thing. Even if you CAN request a consult with a simple computer order, I think it would be pretty rude to call a consult without actually CALLING the consultant (or service-specific resident).
Not quite.
In the world of private practice (especially in a hospital like mine, where there are few residents), consult requests get sent to your office secretary. She relays it to whichever partner happens to be on call that day, and the physician sees the patient between office hours or after office hours are over. The attendings would actually be quite peeved if I called the office and asked to speak with them directly, since most of them are either seeing patients in the office or finishing charts or paperwork.
The only time I have ever called an office and asked to speak to a consulting physician directly was for a cancer patient who was starting to crump. Obviously, that was an emergency, though.
Your view is colored (as mine was) by being in the university setting, where most consults get called in to a service pager (being held by a resident) or to a consultant who is seeing patients in the hospital all day long. This is not how it frequently works in a community hospital, though.
