Taking call is 100% illogical in most PP. Requiring it would usually just be a sign the office isn't busy enough to hire you or help you thrive. Same for any NH stuff. You want office >> surgery/wound care >> marketing >>>> any inpt or NH stuff (unless you enjoy it, don't have more lucritive work available, are doing it efficiently by seeing many pts per swoop, and are being well compensated... so basically nobody in PP).
It is fine to go round on your own
rare pt who ends up in house for abx or foot injury or complication of wound/surgery/whatever, but you generally want to STRONGLY discourage new inpt consults by being slow to respond to them, not attracting them, not f/u rounding unless truly warranted (just quick fix and drop them a card to f/u office), etc. Not joking.
If you enjoy the inpt work or don't have better stuff to do, it makes a tiny bit of sense to garner consults
if one has dedicated time at the wound center or wants that kind of wounds + grafts + amps practice (you can dump the complicated or bad/no insurance pts on that wound center/office, not your own). That is basic and boring to me, it can lead to bad hours very fast, and is certainly not the kind of work I enjoy... but it can pay well and be a decent start if it's available to a slow or startup PP. Too much of that finds me by accident already, though. I sure won't go looking for it. Be aware, you tend to "steal" a lot of other area DPMs' pts when you do that work in a metro (the pt was doing outpt ulcer care with another doc and you get consult for amp, etc), so it can make you a bit unpopular in that regard also.
Other than those two situations above of 1 = PKTY ends up inpt/ER or 2= slow and have a WCC to dump on, it is almost never an efficient use of one's PP time to be in the hospital unless you are really trying to grow and pick up new patients at any cost. That is usually a saturated metro. It can work a tiny bit if you have office in/near hospital and can stack up multiple pts to round on, do inpt surgery on, etc. Still, most of the docs you'll meet from consults will be docs who do a lot of inpt, so they'll send you (drumroll) more inpt consults. That may work veeery slowly and ineffectively to build a legit base of outpt office appts with good insurance (which is the whole point of PP in 95% of cases), but most of the calc decub, ram horn nails, tinea, gangrene 5th toe, etc that you are consulted to see inpt in the hospital won't ever make it to your office anyways - nor do you generally want it to. Those sick pts, wheelchair, poorly controlled DM, etc are not a huge problem in WCCenter, but in your office, they very well may ruin your flow.
As was said by
@wakaflocka88, you are MUCH better off just marketing to the FPs and specialists who have mostly OUTpts and will send you more and more OUTpts than the hospital docs who will just give you more inpt work. Yuck. I ask the floor and ER to only call me on surgical stuff (gas, open fx, etc) and just send the rest to the office. I want to keep the ER happy, but the day they ever call me for pt I've never seen with ingrown or sprain or something that is obviously not admit or surgical, I set the record straight and ask them to splint and send to office on those... vibe is 'I'm willing to help but quite busy with scheduled pts.' Same with inpt... call me if the admission depends on my eval or procedure and I will see them
if and when I can, but please don't ever call me for nonsense.
You get what you allow.
...Let the hospital employ docs, residency programs, etc take the call for 400lb guy Jones fx, MedicAid kid punctures, toenails in ICU, drive the pus bus, uninsured IVDA ankle fx. They get paid whether pt payers and the hours are bad or good. PP docs do not. As
@619 said, it's all collections or % in PP.
Again, in nearly any PP, you're significantly better off just making relationships with the PCPs and collecting working age pts, outpt surgery good outcomes, refers, goodwill, $$$. It's fine to be friendly with ER, inpt docs, etc (and I certainly am), but you absolutely want the message to be "I'm NOT on call, I'm busy in the office, I do want to help if truly needed and if I'm able, but again... I've got a lot of outpt work already." That's my focus... and if you play your cards right and make relationship correct, that
8-5 weekday 9-5 M-Th and 9-3 Fri office is also the focus of most of your web of PCPs who refer. Like attracts like.
🙂