And I've heard hospitals 'credential' you to perform a particular procedure based upon whether you met the minimum number of cases for that procedure. Presumably, there is some way you can assist another attending if you're short a few cases so that you can get privileges.
Not necessarily. I have privileges at several hospitals and have only been asked to document specific numbers for certain "special privileges". I've never seen an application ask for a minimum number of cases for those things included under General Surgery Core Privileges.
Every hospital has a slightly different format (and I've typed this elsewhere in this forum, but its probably faster to just type it again) and specifics as to what you "get" with general surgery.
Most will want a procedural log for recent residency grads but I've never heard of someone requesting something that they didn't have enough - ie, if its enough for ABS, its enough for the hospital (save for Pilot Doc's comment below about competition). Some want documentation from your residency PD that you have been trained in the procedures you are requesting (obviously for recent grads and first time applicants for privileges).
For example, I am reapplying for privileges at one hospital and the Delineation of Privileges is:
ADMIT patients with problems related to general surgery; provide consultation for problems related to general surgery; other diagnostic tests and procdures for problems related to general surgery' and treat patients with general surgery problems.
CORE PROCEDURAL PRIVILEGES: All General Surgeons are eligible to apply for the following core procedures.
Amputations
Anal and Rectal Surgery (including hemorrhoidectomy, drainage of rectal abscesses and rectal problems)
Biliary Tract Surgery (including cholecystectomy, common duct procedures and biliary enteric bypass)
Breast Surgery (including biopsy and resection for cancer)
Gastroduodenal Surgery (of esophagus, stomach and duodenum)
Splenectomy or Splenic Repair
Hepatic Resections
Hernia Repair (including all hernias of abdominal wall and peritoneal cavity)
Surgery of the intestine small and large (including resection with anastomosis, internal bypass (NOT for obesity) and external diversion)
Pancreatic Surgery (including resection and diversion)
Radical Cancer Surgery (including regional lymph node dissection)
Head and Neck Surgery (including thyroidectomy, parathyroidectomy, tracheotomy, and salivary gland resection)
Split thickness skin grafts
Varicose veins (actually spelled VERIcose veins on the app!
🙄 )
For the following SPECIAL PROCEDURES and ENDOSCOPY PROCEDURES: general surgeons are encouraged to apply provided specific training criteria are met:
Laparoscopic procedures related to general surgery
Laser Argon/Co2/YAG
Conscious Sedation
Thorascopic Laser Surgery
Endovenous Radiofrequency Ablation
Male Sterilization
Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy
Stereotactic Biopsy
Biliary Stenting
EGD
Colonoscopy
Colonscopy with Polypectomy
ERCP
Esophageal Variceal Sclerosis
Esophageal Dilatation
Flex Sig
PEG
Sigmoidscopy with Biopsy
Sphincterotomies
What I am getting at : does that mean that every procedure you trained on during the 3 general surgery years in an integrated residency is fair game? Meaning, you could ask to be credentialed on those, and receive reimbursement from insurance?
Fair game as in, can you request privileges in it? Sure. However, it remains to be seen how hospitals will manage this. The application I am filling out for reappointment to the hospital above clearly says that be granted General Surgery privileges you must be Board Eligible AND in the process of being BC (ie, only for people within their 5 years of eligiblity) or Board Certified. Thus, currently it sounds as if you will not be granted general surgery privileges without being BE/BC. I can't see any hospital making the Delineation of Privileges even MORE detailed (ie, focusing on what you did during your 3 years of gen surg and giving you privileges for those procedures only).
Or is the last part the sticking point : do the good, private insurance companies simply refuse to pay anyone who is not board eligible for performing a procedure in a certain 'coding category'.
They can and they have. If an insurance company decides you are not trained in a procedure, they can deny payment.
This has happened in the past and been successful adjudicated in the situation of surgeons performing image guided biopsies. Some insurance companies were denying reimbursement for these procedures because all of their documentation required that it be done by a radiologist. Surgeons had to prove that they had sufficient training to do these procedures and that if the training met the ACR requirements, that there was no reason you should deny reimbursement based on what residency the physician completed.
Much of the time this isn't caught by the massive insurance companies and technically if you are licensed, you can do anything. Whether or not hospitals will give you privileges or insurance companies pay, is another matter entirely.
As a general rule, the answer to any credentialing question is "it depends".
Lots of factors, but it generally boils down to money. If a liberal credentialing policy will bring extra business to a facility, you're likely to get privileges. Likewise, if your procedure of choice is going to steal business from someone who is already bringing big $$ to the facility, fat chance.
Absolutely. Fancy hospital X has no incentive to piss off fat cat Dr. Gastroenterologist and allow you to do ERCPs (for example).
The minute I start to try and do "real" general surgery is the minute the general surgeons start to scream and make me take general surgery call. Don't fool yourself into thinking that these hospitals or your colleagues aren't thinking about THEIR bottom line.
In the situation of a general surgeon applying for credentials at a facility, there will typically be a list of basic procedures that any general surgeon will get privileges for based on completing a residency. (hernias, appendectomy, etc) For newer or more specialized procedures (lap colon, whipple) you may need to provide specific proof of training.
Exactly. Every hospital I've applied to has some basic procedures included under general surgery and most also have a supplemental list of advanced laparoscopic skills, etc. Vascular Surgery is almost always a separate procedure list from General Surgery.
Whether you could get privileged for GS type cases without being GS boarded ... who knows. Nobody's out there yet. I suspect it that's really an interest to you, you should do the extra year.
Right. We don't know the answer yet.
Reimbursement is another issue. Winged Scapula can probably comment on this more intelligently than I, but you might have trouble getting contracts with insurance plans, although I doubt they'd deny an out of network claim.
As I noted above, the insurance companies also do their own credentialing and decide whether you are trained to do certain procedures. They can always deny you based on what they consider inappropriate procedures for your specialty. I'd imagine (and again this is only a guess since this hasn't been an issue yet) that if you are trained as a Vascular Surgeon they will deny General Surgery codes because you aren't trained to the BE/BC requirement in that specialty.
The bigger question is whether the holders of good private insurance who are presumably moderately sophisticated would want to patronize you instead of someone who is fully trained
I wouldn't and I don't even have good private insurance.
😉
I've wondered about this. Poop is gross. But then, so is anatomy lab and Ob/Gyn. Wouldn't a general surgery resident get used to it, even if his dream was to some day to pass the pearly gates of vascular or plastics?
Ignoring the vaguely misogynistic comment about Ob-Gyn being gross, most surgeons don't think poop or anatomy lab is "gross". So of course we get used to it, generally MUCH earlier than residency, otherwise we wouldn't be general surgeons. I frankly am much more grossed out by children picking their nose and eating it than I am in looking at someone's vajayjay or a belly full of succus.
Well, I figured after a while it would grow on you. Rerouting poop might get to be fun. It might be a crappy job, but someone's got to do it.
Also, the poop has to get out somehow, without leaking into the abdomen. Otherwise the patient will die. So general surgeons do save lives.
I'm not sure it grows on you. You learn to deal with it, you realize you ARE saving lives and you do what the patient needs. Residents who go into colorectal aren't necessarily anymore interested in poop than the rest of us, but enjoy the operations, the patients, the pathology, etc. I have a high tolerance for high maintenance patients, hence my choice of a specialty. I know many others who prefer trauma so they don't have to talk to patients, etc.
We've all chosen our paths for various reasons. I'm sure most of us are not enthralled with fecal matter, at least not in Freudian terms, but rather see it as a necessary part of the job we do. If you can't handle it, then general surgery isn't the job for you.
As Pilot Doc noted, it remains to be seen what the outcomes will be for those without BE in general surgery and seeking hospital privileges. I'm fairly sure that 99.8% of vascular surgeons (except the old school guys) have no interest in doing belly cases. I have no interest in doing amputations or vascular bypasses. Most CT surgeons have no interest in anal rectal cases. Most colorectal surgeons have little interest in trauma, and so on.