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When can they terminate without cause?Thankfully just got a 5 year renewal, which should get me to financial independence! If the contract is lost at that point I'll have tons of options.
When can they terminate without cause?Thankfully just got a 5 year renewal, which should get me to financial independence! If the contract is lost at that point I'll have tons of options.
When can they terminate without cause?
I work at a busy, medium-acuity level 1, I'm the fastest doc with average 2.6 pph although many days it is closer to 3 pph. My dispo times average in the low 30 minutes. We have scribes but I don't use them as I realized that they just slow me down. I ALWAYS finish my notes before leaving. We have EPIC and Dragon. Here's my work flow.
1- Pick up several charts, 5 at most, go over all vitals/medical history/triage notes/past visits/etc, write in piece of scrap paper room number and chief complaint.
2- Get up and see all 5.
3- Come back to desk and write all orders.
4- Discharge those that aren't getting a workup and put them up in the rack.
5- NOW I document, patients already dispo'd I do the whole note in one sitting and those that are still cooking I do everything plus first half of MDM. Finish MDM after final dispo. I usually will not pick up any new ones until all 5 have been documented, unless something critical comes in.
6- Rinse and repeat, and I ALWAYS run my list before I pick up more patients to dispo as I go.
Avg dispo in 30 min/pt. Starting with 5 new pts per hour. rinse & repeat. that averages to 10pph x8 hrs/shift = 80 pts/shift! Your workflow kicks butt!
Well luckily the rate of patients coming in decreases throughout the shift, so I end up seeing on average 2.6 per hour.
To those talking about being "fastest". Time to dispo is a game and the only reason I am "fastest" is because I am playing the game a little better than everybody else at my shop. Let me give you some examples on how I do that.
A drunk guy comes in, no injuries, looks well, dude just needs to sleep it off. Instead of holding the guy for 6 hours in my tracker I will write a free text order and verbally communicate to his nurse to make sure that I can sober test the patient before he is physically released from the ED, then I will click discharge on the system and print out the paperwork, boom, dispo time 20 minutes as opposed to 6 hours, all the while the same thing is accomplished.
75 YO woman comes in with chest pain, h/o CAD with CABBG and multiple prior MIs. That is an admission every day of the week and twice on Sundays. I will see that patient, place orders, request a bed, and click on "pending admit" on dispo tab, time to dispo 5 minutes according to EPIC, however in reality it is much longer since I have to wait for labs, etc, before I can call upstairs. Think about how many patients you see that you immediately know they will be admitted.
A simple procedure (lac/paronychia/abscess) comes in, I will see the patient, place orders, discharge and print paperwork, and THEN do the procedure, nurses know not to discharge until I am done. Dispo time 10 minutes.
There's other examples but I will stop there.
Like everybody else, I have patients in whom I am not sure what the ultimate disposition is and those I will hold until I have the information I need. I do tend to discharge more than admit, and I do tend to order less tests than most, which also helps. But rest assured that number one priority for me is patient safety.
The numbers are all a game and we all just need to play it better 😀
Do y'all prefer Dragon or scribes?
One of my shops got Dragon and I'm now a huge fan ... scribe turn over is quick and there's a lot of green ones that require too much editing out the "worst headache of their life" and pan-positive ROS notes.
I have used both and can say with absolutely no uncertainty that scribes trump dragon by a factor of 10. Dragon is not efficient even when tricked out and using macros. If dragon is working better for you than a scribe program, then your scribe program needs to be fired/outsourced. Just out of curiosity, is your scribe program internally run?
If you care about the quality of your notes and documenting MDM appropriately when needed, I would strongly disagree.
If you care about the quality of your notes and documenting MDM appropriately when needed, I would strongly disagree.
I have used both and can say with absolutely no uncertainty that scribes trump dragon by a factor of 10. Dragon is not efficient even when tricked out and using macros. If dragon is working better for you than a scribe program, then your scribe program needs to be fired/outsourced. Just out of curiosity, is your scribe program internally run?
Then it's a 90 day contract, not a 5 yr contract. You could be working for a CMG by October.I'd have to go look, but I imagine that's the 90 day out.
Generally, while I am documenting on the last patient I saw who is admitted or discharged, I sign up for the next patient and put in orders but don't see them. If it's a RUQ abdominal pain I'll order CBC, CMP, Lipase, and US. That means the workup is in progress while I am documenting on the last patient. I'll see the next patient about 10-15 minutes later and often some of the labs are already back. Rinse, repeat. It really speeds up your efficiency if you put in orders before you see the patient. A 75 yo with CAD and chest pain will be an automatic admit. I order the EKG, CXR, POC Troponin and CBC before even seeing the patient. Often X-ray is waiting for me to leave the room. I can get a typical elderly CP admitted in about 35 minutes.
Then it's a 90 day contract, not a 5 yr contract. You could be working for a CMG by October.
Reasonable people can always disagree, but whenever I meet physicians who feel this way, it's tells me that they haven't worked with a good scribe program. I have worked with a bad one before and felt like you do. Now that I work with a high functioning one I have absolutely no doubts. I use a scribe to get all the HPI, physical exam, differential, importing labs, CT reads, etc. If your scribe can't do that then there's either a problem with them or a problem with your ability to effectively use scribes (which is a skill that you have to develop). Then I take a few seconds to jot down a quick blurb in the MDM.
That may be. But my point remains the same. If a five year contract has a 90 day termination clause without cause, as many do, then there's no comfort in it being a "5 year" contract. That being said, if a lower bidder is no threat, CMG or otherwise, then there's not much reason to even have a contract. Yet, WCIs group has a contract. Why? Because Emergency Physicians that think they can't lose their contract, lose their contracts. Often. Either way, I hope it works out for him. I'm not coming to take his job and I'm sure he's well equipped to deal with whatever situation he faces.Could be, but unlikely. There is almost zero CMG penetration in WCI's state from what I see. I have a theory as to why that is and why it is likely to stay that way but it's not too hard to figure out.
What's your theory?Could be, but unlikely. There is almost zero CMG penetration in WCI's state from what I see. I have a theory as to why that is and why it is likely to stay that way but it's not too hard to figure out.
Then it's a 90 day contract, not a 5 yr contract. You could be working for a CMG by October.
What's your theory?
Well luckily the rate of patients coming in decreases throughout the shift, so I end up seeing on average 2.6 per hour.
To those talking about being "fastest". Time to dispo is a game and the only reason I am "fastest" is because I am playing the game a little better than everybody else at my shop. Let me give you some examples on how I do that.
A drunk guy comes in, no injuries, looks well, dude just needs to sleep it off. Instead of holding the guy for 6 hours in my tracker I will write a free text order and verbally communicate to his nurse to make sure that I can sober test the patient before he is physically released from the ED, then I will click discharge on the system and print out the paperwork, boom, dispo time 20 minutes as opposed to 6 hours, all the while the same thing is accomplished.
75 YO woman comes in with chest pain, h/o CAD with CABBG and multiple prior MIs. That is an admission every day of the week and twice on Sundays. I will see that patient, place orders, request a bed, and click on "pending admit" on dispo tab, time to dispo 5 minutes according to EPIC, however in reality it is much longer since I have to wait for labs, etc, before I can call upstairs. Think about how many patients you see that you immediately know they will be admitted.
A simple procedure (lac/paronychia/abscess) comes in, I will see the patient, place orders, discharge and print paperwork, and THEN do the procedure, nurses know not to discharge until I am done. Dispo time 10 minutes.
There's other examples but I will stop there.
Like everybody else, I have patients in whom I am not sure what the ultimate disposition is and those I will hold until I have the information I need. I do tend to discharge more than admit, and I do tend to order less tests than most, which also helps. But rest assured that number one priority for me is patient safety.
The numbers are all a game and we all just need to play it better 😀
Nobody does, obviously.I'm very much aware of that, although it seems to me less likely with a 5 year contract, even if said contract has a 90 day out, than a 90 day contract. At any rate, who wants to renegotiate a contract 4 times a year?
Nobody does, obviously.
EM jobs are more like rivers than rocks. My reason for making the point is directed more towards young people get wise to the recruiting BS/lies that get told ad infinitum, like,
"We have a five year contract, therefore..." Here comes the lie, "...therefore, the terms of this job that I'm advertising to you can't change for five years. That's because we have a 'five year contract.'" {Well, yes, but not really. Can be tossed in garbage can on 90 days notice, no reason needed.} "And because..." Here comes lie #2, "...because we have several partners high up in administration, we're guaranteed to renew the contract as is or better in five years." That means little.
All are common recruiting lies and/or half truths. Every single term of a so-called "iron clad contract" can change in just a few months, on a whim if a hospital CEO wants, for any reason or no reason at all, if there is one of these 90 day, 120 day, termination-without-cause clauses.
Common scenario: ED group has great and seemingly secure contract. Lots of money, great hours, good support staffing. Hospital changes out CEO due to retirement/promotion/relocation, or whatever. New CEO comes in, desperate to make a mark, show his metal, whatever. Says, "This is crap. At my last shop, we had (insert contract clone group)________ that worked for dirt cheap and jumped when we said 'jump.' They were total lap dogs. These guys seem like ----s. What's the out clause on this contract?"
Pointdexter #2, "90 days, boss."
New CEO, "Get Jim ____ from (insert contract clone group)________ on the phone. I want them in here in 90 days. The existing ER doctors can join these guys..." (on completely new terms, new pay, new jobs, new director, new everything) "...or they can go _____themselves. Pointdexter, #2, do you see how it's done? This will increase my bonus by at least (insert dollar amount, could be $1, or $100,000, either way it's easy money to him)_______dollars." Big smile, half-belch and warm-fuzzy feeling ensue.
Point? Recruits, be wise to the recruiting BS that gets told to you. No ER contract is as secure as they make it sound. Don't put too much emphasis on finding the perfect job, or expect to keep the perfect job. The "perfect job" could vaporize on short notice, with no warning. You won't likely be out of a job, but the terms could change 180 and there's likely not much you can do about it. But you can make changes to remain mobile if a job changes in unacceptable ways, or at the least, have realistic expectations. EM jobs are more like rivers than rocks. They are rarely stable, and always changing.
Generally, while I am documenting on the last patient I saw who is admitted or discharged, I sign up for the next patient and put in orders but don't see them. If it's a RUQ abdominal pain I'll order CBC, CMP, Lipase, and US. That means the workup is in progress while I am documenting on the last patient. I'll see the next patient about 10-15 minutes later and often some of the labs are already back. Rinse, repeat. It really speeds up your efficiency if you put in orders before you see the patient. A 75 yo with CAD and chest pain will be an automatic admit. I order the EKG, CXR, POC Troponin and CBC before even seeing the patient. Often X-ray is waiting for me to leave the room. I can get a typical elderly CP admitted in about 35 minutes.
Wow. Automatic admit. I send home at least 1/2 of my chest pain patients. 25% of those that stay end up in our observation unit overnight with a r/o and stress. The other 1/2 either rule in or have a great story and get admitted.
So funny how regional variability plays a huge component in the game.
AbsolutelyIt's an adaptation to the rules of the perverse game the practice of medicine has partially become.