Ok, let me say that this comment will be controversial. It's NOT my comment, but rather a comment from various residents and attendings in other specialties. I'm personally very interested in EM, and is my top choice as a specialty right now, but was just bothered by this comment and wanted to get your take on this and how one could deal with it.
The statement: "ER docs are nothing more than glorified triage nurses." Followed by, "In a few years, I can see how it would fiscally make sense if hospitals decided to man their ERs with mid-levels, since ER docs don't do much anyways, other than be kings of referrals."
😡
I'm sure this statement has been made MANY times, especially since I've heard it from folks from the west coast to the east.
if you want to do it, don't worry about what anyone else says or thinks about it. i'm sure, if you wanted to, you could find the negative aspect of every field/specialty/subspecialty out there.
This attitude is more prevalent in academic centers where #1 the residents on admitting and specialty services absolutley love to bitch and moan about every consult, have no financial incentive to see patients and have attendings who want to spend days ferreting out differentials that the ED "missed"
Residents and fellows are notorious for moaning about admissions and consults and often will say stuff like ED physicians always consult them, never think for themselves, yada yada yada. (I actually think it's funny how they moan about it.) The funny thing is that community attendings rarely moan about this stuff. I was shocked when a community urology attending told me he was going to admit a patient known to him with a 4 mm renal stone without complications simply because he couldn't get adequate pain relief after 3 doses of morphine. No hesitation to admit whatsoever. I remember my resident days where the urology residents tried to not admit, and when an admission was indicated, they would try to turf it to medicine.
i think the financial incentive is huge, absoutely huge in the reason that community attendings don't bitch and moan, and why residents do. in fact, i had an attending tell me so, in that the very patients we hate to see as residents, we'll love to see as attendings.
medicare patient, uti with nausea and vomiting. drg is for 3 days. so, the patient will be in house for those 3 days with iv antibiotics. the attending gets paid, little may be done besides the antibiotics. in fact, the patient may be without the nausea and vomiting after the 1st night.
residents see the case and are disappointed because there's little to do, little management... patient's on the service, with little to do for him or her... can feel like a waste of time.
a community attending may see it as an opportunity to take care of an easy patient, get paid for doing very little work each day ($50-100 per day), and perhaps find a reason for an unnecesarry consult in order to scratch the back of a colleague (stable creatinine of 1.5 on an ace inhibitor, let me get a renal consult to tell me that).
its not all residents that hate it, and its not all community attendings that love it. but it would be interesting if residents were to be paid in a similar fashion to attendings. imagine a bad call night all of a sudden just paid the rent for the month.
of course its not going to happen, but i think it would be interesting nonetheless.