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- Podiatry Student
What exactly do you mean?
DPMs who go around rounding on inpatients and doing surgery all day every day? I'd say that's extremely rare. Most pods have a clinical practice (most private, some are hospital-based), and then they go to hospital or surg center to do their OR cases. Most will also have a hospital (or multiple hospitals) where they do inpatient consults and round on their clinic patients when they are admitted.
I guess if a podiatrist's clinic was hospital-based, they only do surgery at that hospital, and they only do consults there, that is what you mean by "DPM hospitalist"? That is a situation for a few DPMs, but not too many... probably mostly just the residency directors/attendings at big academic centers.
Hospitalist is a term usually used for internal med docs who take care of and round on the medical inpatients at their hospital.
an ER resident here. where i'm currently training in the bronx, our podiatrists are under the surgical department and admits pt for their surgeries (thru us in the ER, well all specialty admits thru us, no direct admission in my hospital). They also work in pod clinics under our HMO umbrella. Pod residents also cover the orthopedic deparment in off hours (no ortho resident, we have IM, Peds, ER, FP, Gen surg, Rads, and of course pods.... i believe 4 yrs program). So to me they're hospitalist? (i think the strict definition of hospitalist is IM docs who only do inpatient). All surgeon typically like mention above, will have their clinic practice and perform surgeries where they're priviledged.
an ER resident here. where i'm currently training in the bronx, our podiatrists are under the surgical department and admits pt for their surgeries (thru us in the ER, well all specialty admits thru us, no direct admission in my hospital). They also work in pod clinics under our HMO umbrella. Pod residents also cover the orthopedic deparment in off hours (no ortho resident, we have IM, Peds, ER, FP, Gen surg, Rads, and of course pods.... i believe 4 yrs program). So to me they're hospitalist? (i think the strict definition of hospitalist is IM docs who only do inpatient). All surgeon typically like mention above, will have their clinic practice and perform surgeries where they're priviledged.
Is that St.Barns or Wycoff?
There are no DPM hospitalists. I'm a DO, DPM and in order to be a "hospitalist" you need to be either an IM doc, FP doc or peds doc. A DPM does not have the license or the training to be a hospitalist.
so you're saying that most of the hospitalists are DOs, since most cant match into competitive residencies.
why in the world would a DPM want to be a hospitalist? i dont think the op knew the true definition of a hospitalist when posting.
There are no DPM hospitalists. I'm a DO, DPM and in order to be a "hospitalist" you need to be either an IM doc, FP doc or peds doc. A DPM does not have the license or the training to be a hospitalist.
This is an important point.^ 👍...DOs are geared toward primary care (FP,IM,Peds) of course we'll have a high percentage of primary care DOs (shortest residency and we're taught a unique skills, OMT, that is built for primary care use). We all now this prior to deciding to go to the DO route. I don't see this as a knock to DOs. As we all now, once med school is over, title doesn't mean much, you're more defined by your specialty.
I consider myself a DPM hospitalist. I am employed by a hospital, see inpatients, ED and ICU consults, operate in the OR, and run a hospital-based wound center.
And, Prof. Larry Harkless (Dean of the new CA school) uses the term "podiatric hospitalist" frequently. He was one as well, while at Univ of Texas.
LCR
This is an important point.^ 👍
A lot of people, especially pre-meds, look at MD and DO as basically the same thing now... if you don't get into MD school, you apply to DO. That may be the modern state where it's now sometimes used as a backdoor into any specialty, but for those genuinely interested in the actual osteopathic philosophy, I believe it is geared strongly towards primary care. It's not as if you will be shunned if you end up as a DO trying to match a specialty outside of IM/FP/Peds, but as I understand from talking to a few older attending DOs at the hospital I was training at durning 3rd year, it actually was that way not real long ago. When they went to DO school, it was assumed from the start that you were interested in, and ultimately headed for, primary care. From what I heard, their classmates who tried to match surgery, path, rad, etc were not looked upon very favorably.
...I was never really interested in DO school, haven't done a ton of reading, and could somewhat innacurate, but I do agree that a lot of students fail to realize that DO training is intended to be geared towards primary care. I have found that out more and more as I've rotated with DO students and attendings. Things seem to be gradually shifting since there are now a few dozen DO residencies for specialties outside of IM/FP/ER/Peds and many other DOs try to match with allopathic non-PC residencies. However, I think the original philosophy, not just grades, boards, politics, or degree name, is still the major reason so many DOs go into primary care...
