- Joined
- May 27, 2004
- Messages
- 81
- Reaction score
- 0
I'd like to know if Family physicians who are ER certified get paid the same as docs who have completed an Emergency Medicine Residency?
Gr42 said:I'd like to know if Family physicians who are ER certified get paid the same as docs who have completed an Emergency Medicine Residency?
Gr42 said:I'd like to know if Family physicians who are ER certified get paid the same as docs who have completed an Emergency Medicine Residency?
It will be difficult to find jobs plentiful even in rural areas in the future. If you have any intention of ever living in a major metropolitan area, then realize that FPs are already completely absent from EDs in new hiring.Gr42 said:Thank you very much for all of your input in this matter. I was just curious sfter attending a residency fair held during a conference las weekend. Family practice physicians made sound like if they wold be able to practice anywhere; however, they never mentioned anything about differences in compensation. Once again thanks to all of you Emergency Physicians and residents for your answers.
FoughtFyr said:To quote Col. Potter - "HORSEPUCKY!"
Sessamoid said:It will be difficult to find jobs plentiful even in rural areas in the future. If you have any intention of ever living in a major metropolitan area, then realize that FPs are already completely absent from EDs in new hiring.
Except apparently in Florida. 😡roja said:Older EM certified attendings are board certified because in general, they only do EM and are thus qualified. However, since EM residencies have been around so long, its a closed path.
roja said:The vast majority of hospitals are trying to phase out EMP's.. even lower volume ED's (as small as 15,000), probably to cover thier tails...
jonahhelix said:During my outpatient Family Practice clerkship, I was sent to a small, way underserved, town to work with a practice that also contracted to cover the local ED. A certain number of shifts were required by each practice doc, and the ED work was included in their compensation package.
When I asked about whether the hospital was looking to staff the ED with EPs, I was told that they couldn't afford it. Given their arrangement with this practice - paying maybe 200k per year, no benefits - I can see why the switch would seem prohibitive. Not to mention, how many EM BC/BE-ers would want to work in Podunk for low-end compensation?
While I personally don't like the notion of FPs staffing EDs, I wouldn't want to see this sort of ED closed just because EP-staffing was not possible. Something tells me that rural/underserved medicine will always be a little different than city/ivory tower medicine.
The FP programs probably have a better sense of this dynamic than we do, so maybe - as much as we don't want to hear it - they weren't just blowing smoke?
FoughtFyr said:Unfortunately, for the FP who desires this sort of work, the medical liability is no different in that ED than in others. The med-mal carriers know this and very often will effectively "shut down" the ED by refusing coverage. It is not that FPs "have a better handle on this", it is simply that they are not trained to handle it.
GTW - These same small towns are often lacking in cardiologists. Should FPs be allowed to cath because they want to and there is a need? EM is a specialty, FPs cannot do it because they "want to" and there is a need...
- H
jonahhelix said:Trust me, we are all on the same side, generally, on this issue. However, I am not so bold to intimate that emergency care (vs. EM, the spec) is as inaccessible to FP's as cardiac cath. Such an analogy is hyperbolic at best, factious and inflammatory at worst.
ANY physician (and layperson, for that matter) can provide the best care he/she is trained to in an emergency situation. While FP's will NEVER cath a patient, they are residency-trained to assess and treat a wide spectrum of illness/injury that presents to the ED. However, not all FP's have shown awareness of their limitations, nor are they well-trained to do so (re: ED work) during their residency. I believe this is the crux of the FP in the ED issue.
Still, I maintain that there are going to be circumstances where non-EM-trained physicians are going to be needed to staff EDs. How we help "train" and work with these docs will be crucial to patient care as a whole.
I know we are fighting for validation of our specialty, but I think there are tons of reasons to support EPs and EM that don't settle for directing venom at FPs and their desire to care for patients often ignored by the rest of medicine. (I know I'm not willing to work in an ED for $80k while seeing few interesting cases ever....)
Still, I'm sure having a variety of tactics serves a purpose, so here's to everyone for fighting our fight however you do it. 👍
jonahhelix said:ANY physician (and layperson, for that matter) can provide the best care he/she is trained to in an emergency situation.
Seaglass said:I am unfamiliar with any FMP's proficient in the placement of a chest tube.
stoic said:You should come hang out in the middle of kansas then! Pretty much all the ED's outside of KC and wichita are staffed by a majority of FP's and internists. And they do place chest tubes. We're talking about ER's that see 20-30k a year.
Not saying it's good or bad, but I do think that things are going to be slow to change out here in the middle of nowhere. Maybe I'll be the first BC emergency physician back in my home town 😀.
Derek said:"the back door attempts such as in Florida need to be dealt with. "
I have heard Sessamoid make reference to this FL issue as well, but I am still unclear as to what this is about.
Does anyone have some insight into this?
docrjay said:"Now, I can appriciate that FPs genuinely want to help. But, for the patient who enters the ED en extremis , an FP manned ED is as dangerous as a FP manned cath suite. People deserve better, and as has been pointed out here, better exists. EM trained PAs for example..."
-- post by FoughtFyr
Does this imply then that EM trained PA's are better then FP's? 😡
no doubt about it. an fp doc without specialty training in em has maybe 6 wks as a med student and 3 months as a resident. wow, 18 weeks of em training in their entire lives. a typical em pa was a medic or er rn before pa school and spent all of their electives on em related courses. for example I was an er tech for 5 yrs then a medic for 5 yrs before becoming a pa. I had 22 weeks of em in pa school( general/peds/elective) in addition to 5 weeks of trauma surgery, not to mention acls/atls/pals and all cme ever since graduation taken in em. granted an fp doc who expresses a serious interest in em and takes lots of extra coursework/electives has good preparation but a typical fp residency grad right out of residency? I would take the em pa hands down every time for the care of myself or my family(and have on several occassions).one of my current responsibilities as an em pa is to precept fp residents r1-r3 in the er. many of the interns can't suture. many of the r2's and r3's don't know how to do regional blocks or reduce fxs or do facial lac repairs on kids.....recently I was precpting an r3 who was totally out of his depth working up an elderly pt with chest pain...yes, there are great fp docs working in the er, but they made themselves great. they didn't get that from basic fp residency training.docrjay said:"Now, I can appriciate that FPs genuinely want to help. But, for the patient who enters the ED en extremis , an FP manned ED is as dangerous as a FP manned cath suite. People deserve better, and as has been pointed out here, better exists. EM trained PAs for example..."
-- post by FoughtFyr
Does this imply then that EM trained PA's are better then FP's? 😡
Some FP program directors might make this claim as family medicine has had a tremendous decline in the number of applications received over the past few years.Gr42 said:Thank you very much for all of your input in this matter. I was just curious sfter attending a residency fair held during a conference las weekend. Family practice physicians made sound like if they wold be able to practice anywhere; however, they never mentioned anything about differences in compensation. Once again thanks to all of you Emergency Physicians and residents for your answers.
southerndoc said:Why would they exempt them from working in a level I trauma center? One would think a level I trauma center would have available nearly every specialty as a consult service. In fact, the majority of level I trauma centers are teaching institutions with in-house consultant services.
I would argue that FP's could work in level I or academic centers that do not have an EM residency, but NOT in rural areas. In rural areas, there is no consult service readily available and EM physicians must manage any and everything that comes through the door. For this, I see the physician having a necessity to be EM trained.
bulgethetwine said:An Interesting compromise has arisen in Canada -- a hybrid pathway available to family practice residency graduates. They take an extra year of residency training in emergency medicine, kind of like an EM fellowship but without the academic focus. Instead, they focus on the nuts and bolts of working the ED, probably not unlike months 18-30 of a typical PGY 1,2,3 residency. AFter that, they apply for a special designation -- not equivalent to a fully trained EP, but a special designation nonetheless.
They are then permitted to work in emergency departments EXCEPT Level I trauma centres (i.e. underserviced areas). It is an interesting approach brought about in part because it is harder to train sufficient EPs in a country where there are fewer urban centres. It has also resulted in a higher proportion of graduates choosing FP as a primary resiency because they don't feel as if there is a path of no return if they don't like/aren't adequately stimulated by FP (there are similar one year 'extra' years available in OBGYN, Anesthesia, and Sports medicine).
Even more interesting is the study done by the Canadian Medical Association exhibiting that 3 years out of the program, there was no significant difference in performance, malpractice, etc. between those who were fully EM certified vs. the FP + 1 configuration.
The hospitals are happy because they have enough (well, closer then they would be otherwise) docs in their ED.
The EM trained EPs are happy because their Level I job opportunities are protected.
The FPs are happy because they feel they got the best of both worlds: A general practice background with some extra training to cover the 20% of the cases (to borrow the stat from the above posts) they wouldn't likely see in an FP residency.
I am sure its not perfect, but it seems to be a better-than-average solution as far as stop-gap solutions go.
Of course, full disclosure would dictate that I add I am Canadian and still chose to do my residency south of the border in EM! 😀
Apollyon said:However, at the same time, aren't there 2 tracks in Canada for EM boarding, with one being the Canadian College of Family Practice - which leads to the "CCFP(EM)" designation? Is that the same thing of which you speak? I thought CCFP-EM was a 3+2 configuration.
eadysx said:I dont mean to hijack here, but my question is a little off topic. If an ED is staffed with FP docs rather than EM docs, does the hospital have to pay more for med. mal. Insurance? If not, what is the incentive for a hospital to seek out EM docs, other than an obvious more focused training with better projected pt outcomes? Is there a penalty for not having EM trained docs around? I am not trying to stir anyone up here; I am just a dumb med student who really doesnt know.
Thanks,
E-
I get paid that for internal moonlighting as an intern!emedpa said:board certified em docs won't work for 75 dollars/hr. fp docs will.
emedpa said:board certified em docs won't work for 75 dollars/hr. fp docs will.