How stressful is it to work as a hospitalist compared to outpatient clinics? Obviously, every job is different but in general which route would provide a better lifestyle? I am trying to decide between the two specialties. IM is a bit more competitive and I wanted to choose where I end up in residency so am leaning towards more so FM. It seems like hospitalists have a better time taking time off work for vacation because it's all shift work and they're technically not providing long term care for a pt compared to outpatient. However, it seems like a lot of hospitalists I see seem pretty unhappy whereas outpatient docs seem like theyre less stressed. Would love to hear your thoughts to help me decide on my specialty
My attendings have told me that depending on your job, you can just round see patients, and just be in and out of the hospital within a few hours. They go home and write up notes and are technically "on call" until something happens. Is this a common thing and is it actually appealing as it sounds?
Well, I did IM and I've been a hospitalist and I'm currently a PCP.
FM if you want to do outpatient is wonderful, so if you're stuck on outpatient, then FM will give you potentially better outpatient exposure to a more broad variety of patient population (peds).
Hospitalist for me was nice to have the 7 on and 7 off. However, the 7 on were brutal. My shifts were 6am to 6pm and at 6am several times I got paged, my patient is coding in the ICU, needed STAT bedside. We had an open ICU so this really made a big difference.
I saw anywhere from 18 to 33 patients a day as a hospitalist. The money was good for working half the year but I was burning out faster than a cheap firework.
Also, VC money (Team health owned by Blackrock) rolled into town and basically tried to do a competitive takeover. They got the contact from the hospital, the TH docs were paid about $75,000 less a year than I was making and required to sign off on NP patients that were seen with no extra pay. This competition pushed our pay down since they ate up a large pool of patients.
Other local hospitalist groups were bought out and similar things happened.
So for me, I was not willing to be some pencil pushers boy to push around. I put in my resignation and moved on and started up my own clinic.
This is my first year open, I take insurance, and I'll net upwards of $400k this year in my own clinic. The stress is high starting up my own clinic but very rewarding. You HAVE to be okay seeing new patients for fatigue, or turning away 30 year old men who want testosterone or 90 pills of xanax. But, for me this is much more enjoyable than waking up at 6am to code blue and being told what to do by hospital admin or being attempted to be pushed out by VC money.
I'm sure there are good hospitalist groups out there but the future is 3-4 large national groups that will run the hospitals.
I currently work 4.5 days per week and have every weekend and holiday off. Yeah, I put up with a lot of bull**** as a PCP but so did I as a hospitalist. It is not a pissing contest about which is more difficult. I view it as, what kind of lifestyle and control do you want over your future. Hospitalist the only way for control is partnership which is rare, or locums and picking your jobs.
If you start your own PCP you will have almost complete control.
PM me if you have any questions.