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As an attending, do you consult less when you work without a resident?
And yes, it's a tougher when they have no insurance.
If that became a clear pattern, the chief of staff and the hospital CEO would start hearing about it. Wallet biopsies and potential EMTALA violations don't fly.
EMTALA does not require that the facility provide treatment beyond stabilization of emergency conditions. The consultant might well be within his or her legal rights to argue that an Emergency trained physician is qualified to stabilize emergency conditions and thus be clear from any emtala obligations - no?
plus when they refuse an admission, they will not out right say it's because of no insurance. They'll find another reason to refuse it. Or if they have to take the admission, they'll be sure to let you know about their frustration.
EMTALA does not require that the facility provide treatment beyond stabilization of emergency conditions. The consultant might well be within his or her legal rights to argue that an Emergency trained physician is qualified to stabilize emergency conditions and thus be clear from any emtala obligations - no?
Disagreement Between Emergency Physician and On-Call Specialist. While the emergency physician and the on-call specialist may need to discuss the best way to meet the individuals medical needs, any disagreement regarding the need for an on-call physician to come to the hospital and examine the individual must be resolved by deferring to the medical judgment of the emergency physician or other practitioner who has personally examined the individual.
The heart of the issue is..."Do residents get treated different than attendings?"
The answer is yes. As a resident, I saw what I thought was a young borderline faking facial paralysis. My attending agreed, but thought that we couldn't call her bluff short of getting an MRI. She had a private doctor who uses private private neurology services. I called the PCP to admit, who asked me to call the neurologist to consult. He said he'd see her in the morning. My attending insisted that I get the neurologist at the bedside. I tried to ask the private neurologist to come see the patient and got the verbal middle finger and asked to talk to my attending. My attending did some major back-peddling to the neurologist on the phone and then laid into me after his conversation with the neurologist had ended. He asked me why I didn't tell him that the consultant was a private physician, not a resident. I had no clue that it would matter.
The truth is that residents get dumped on more easily than full-fledged attendings. Why? 2 reasons:
1. Sometimes we consult for weak reasons and it is easier to inconvenience a resident, whose job it is to be learning the answers to the questions we ask.
2. Residents will not think about a medical problem unless you force them to come down and see the patient. Most residents don't take ownership for their patients as consultants in the middle of the night. You say, "Mrs Johnson is a 56 year old female with a history of CAD, who had a normal stress test about 9 months ago, last cath with stent 16 months ago. She is having vague chest pain that has resolved and is rather adamant that she doesn't want to be in the hospital. I think that it would be reasonable to go home as long as you guys could arrange to see her in clinic and maybe order an out-patient stress test in the near future."
The resident hears, " blah blah blah, go home, blah blah blah." And sleepily says, "Ya, great plan." You can tell that they haven't taken down her name, looked at her records, that they don't care who Mrs Johnson is, or why you are calling. This problem is solved when their body is in the room, they are doing a history and the disposition has been discussed with their attending.
How are they learning that the patient is uninsured during your call for the consult/admission?
How are they learning that the patient is uninsured during your call for the consult/admission?
When I was a med student trying to admit somebody (or get a test or whatever) I quickly found that I was way more successful calling and saying "hey, this is tiger26 from the ED--I've got this 85 yo F who has . . . ). Introducing yourself as a med student is the cue for them tuning out and then pushing back against the admit.
Still, I feel kinda bad about the soft call admits (then I remind myself that those services picked that field for the most part voluntarily, so I don't feel as bad)
I found I consulted less when I got out of residency and started calling attendings because I didn't have some hyperconservative attending making me call them.
Another thing you'll notice is you do a whole lot more phone consulting than seeing them in the ED. I rarely see a consultant in the ED but probably call 5 a day or so.
here is a quick question about billing.
When you call up a consulting attending and have a 5 minutes phone conversation about a patient, does he get paid for that conversation?
I understand that if him or his resident actually go to the ER to evaluate and do a dictation, that's money in the pocket. But if the consultation is purely a phone call, how can they bill for the consulting service?
I do see one benefit is that we do send patient to their office for follow up. That's about it.
If you sent the patient to his clinic for followup, as you mentionedWhen you call up a consulting attending and have a 5 minutes phone conversation about a patient, does he get paid for that conversation?
I understand that if him or his resident actually go to the ER to evaluate and do a dictation, that's money in the pocket. But if the consultation is purely a phone call, how can they bill for the consulting service?
If you sent the patient to his clinic for followup, as you mentioned
So, the attending has to come and see the patient to bill. If he stayed at home, but his resident came in and called him, then he can't bill. Otherwise it is what they call fraud. Similarly, you can't bill a procedure that the attending wasn't standing there "scrubbed and ready" for. This is why surgical residencies frequently have a surgeon in house. That way they can bill for the lines, intubations, and surgeries that happen overnight.
here is a quick question about billing.
When you call up a consulting attending and have a 5 minutes phone conversation about a patient, does he get paid for that conversation?
Seriously? I was shocked if the attending even stuck their head in the room once during surgeries performed at night. Do they just have to be in house or literally in the room?
How are they learning that the patient is uninsured during your call for the consult/admission?