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Hello,
I am very interested in IM because I hear these are the "Master Diagnosticians" who basically know everything (Hyperbole). My current Clinical Systems instructor is an IM trained Physician and she's amazing, she just knows everything, and I really look up to her.
I'm a 2nd year so obviously I have a lot of experience to gain in the realm of rotating through IM services on the floors next year, but I have some questions pertaining to the role of Hospitalists that I was wondering if people could discuss.
1. How involved is the Hospitalist in patient care? What I mean by this is - Let's pretend you have a patient come in for an Endocrine disorder (Let's say Adrenal Insufficiency, I like this example because I just finished my Endocrine module in school) - Do you wait for the Endocrinologist to consult the patient, or can the Hospitalist go ahead and do the ACTH Stimulation Test, and basically whatever test is needed, until they get "stuck" and have to have the specialist come in? What other tests do you find yourself often doing? What is something you basically 100% always wait for a specialist to come in and do? If a problem is pretty severe and the patient basically needs to be consulted by 3 different specialists - How often do you see the patient between all their surgeries and consults?
2. How often are you getting new patients? How long max do you typically hold onto a patient for? What's the shortest you'll receive a patient for?
3. Do you ALWAYS have a well-planned out therapy goal for a patient to follow for their discharge, assuming they have a new diagnosis or poorly treated diagnosis prior to admission? And is this plan always conveyed to the patient's primary care physician? How do you go about alerting their primary that they have a new treatment plan?
4. During a single week, do you feel the clinical presentation of the patients is diverse enough to keep you interested and keep you on your toes? I want a job where I'll be constantly learning new things (at least for a while) - I would hate for example to be on the wards solely for stroke patients where everyone comes in with the same kind of disease presentation. How are patients organized typically in a hospital?
5. How does working with Nurse Practitioners and PAs work as a hospitalist? Do they do the night shifts? Are you on call during your week that you're on, and these NPs and PAs are there with you, monitoring your patients? How often will they get involved? What kinds of things do they do while we're not exactly present in the hospital during an "on week"?
6. Speaking of Night Shifts, I know a lot of EM Physicians complain about the ever-changing schedule and circadian rhythm mess ups - But how do IM doctors deal with this? Is there high burn out due to night shift week as a hospitalist? How often will you typically work a week of all nights?
7. If you had to go back and do it again - Would you choose to be a hospitalist again? If not, what would you change about the job to make it more enjoyable?
8. On your off weeks, do you find yourself - at least more in the beginning, doing a lot of home-reading from journals such as Nature, or JAMA? Do you find these weeks off beneficial to your practice as you're able to read up about certain things that maybe you were a bit uneasy with during your week on that maybe stumped you?
9. How often, during your shift, are you looking up information because a patient stumps you, or comes in with something rare?
Thanks, sorry for the wall of text!
I am very interested in IM because I hear these are the "Master Diagnosticians" who basically know everything (Hyperbole). My current Clinical Systems instructor is an IM trained Physician and she's amazing, she just knows everything, and I really look up to her.
I'm a 2nd year so obviously I have a lot of experience to gain in the realm of rotating through IM services on the floors next year, but I have some questions pertaining to the role of Hospitalists that I was wondering if people could discuss.
1. How involved is the Hospitalist in patient care? What I mean by this is - Let's pretend you have a patient come in for an Endocrine disorder (Let's say Adrenal Insufficiency, I like this example because I just finished my Endocrine module in school) - Do you wait for the Endocrinologist to consult the patient, or can the Hospitalist go ahead and do the ACTH Stimulation Test, and basically whatever test is needed, until they get "stuck" and have to have the specialist come in? What other tests do you find yourself often doing? What is something you basically 100% always wait for a specialist to come in and do? If a problem is pretty severe and the patient basically needs to be consulted by 3 different specialists - How often do you see the patient between all their surgeries and consults?
2. How often are you getting new patients? How long max do you typically hold onto a patient for? What's the shortest you'll receive a patient for?
3. Do you ALWAYS have a well-planned out therapy goal for a patient to follow for their discharge, assuming they have a new diagnosis or poorly treated diagnosis prior to admission? And is this plan always conveyed to the patient's primary care physician? How do you go about alerting their primary that they have a new treatment plan?
4. During a single week, do you feel the clinical presentation of the patients is diverse enough to keep you interested and keep you on your toes? I want a job where I'll be constantly learning new things (at least for a while) - I would hate for example to be on the wards solely for stroke patients where everyone comes in with the same kind of disease presentation. How are patients organized typically in a hospital?
5. How does working with Nurse Practitioners and PAs work as a hospitalist? Do they do the night shifts? Are you on call during your week that you're on, and these NPs and PAs are there with you, monitoring your patients? How often will they get involved? What kinds of things do they do while we're not exactly present in the hospital during an "on week"?
6. Speaking of Night Shifts, I know a lot of EM Physicians complain about the ever-changing schedule and circadian rhythm mess ups - But how do IM doctors deal with this? Is there high burn out due to night shift week as a hospitalist? How often will you typically work a week of all nights?
7. If you had to go back and do it again - Would you choose to be a hospitalist again? If not, what would you change about the job to make it more enjoyable?
8. On your off weeks, do you find yourself - at least more in the beginning, doing a lot of home-reading from journals such as Nature, or JAMA? Do you find these weeks off beneficial to your practice as you're able to read up about certain things that maybe you were a bit uneasy with during your week on that maybe stumped you?
9. How often, during your shift, are you looking up information because a patient stumps you, or comes in with something rare?
Thanks, sorry for the wall of text!