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and imagines the level of care the patient needs (at most places I've been anyway. [Spontaneous pneumo, that's a level 5 (low), nose bleed, thats a 2 (high)])

and imagines the level of care the patient needs (at most places I've been anyway. [Spontaneous pneumo, that's a level 5 (low), nose bleed, thats a 2 (high)])
the IM docs would pissing their pants while trying to kill themselves with their stupid bow ties to avoid the pain. Have you ever seen an ED doc wear a bow tie????
Great, one more person using this dumba$$ argument.
Listen, when you argue that another person's experience is too limited to draw conclusions (ie - "you n is too low"), you don't get to draw the opposite conclusion unless your "n" is much higher.
Duh.
Exactly. You guys gotta understand that the EM doc is there to make sure the patient is stable and then get help from other docs for the definitive care of the patient...unless it's for things that most docs should be able to manage without help anyway. That's why docs trained in some other specialties (FM, IM, General Surgery) can cover the ER and do almost anything as well as a pure EM doc. And that's where, dare I say, the insecurity of a good number of people in EM comes from...that they know the old stereotype of them being a glorified triage nurse has a fair amount of truth to it.
It's funny how most of the lawsuits in EM are against the non-EM trained/board certified docs doing what you just described above. Guess just about anbody can work in the ED, right?
Data, please.
James Bond wears a bow tie
Bat Masterson wore a bow tie
Wyatt Earp wore a bow tie
Their image = bad ass.
It's funny how most of the lawsuits in EM are against the non-EM trained/board certified docs doing what you just described above. Guess just about anbody can work in the ED, right?
Data, please.
>> Originally Posted by Dr. Will
>>It's funny how most of the lawsuits in EM are against the non-EM >>trained/board certified docs doing what you just
>>described above. Guess just about anybody can work in the
>>ED, right?
Data, AND the study demonstrating that the disproportionate number of lawsuits against these docs from other primary specialties is not due to lawyers being more willing to sue when they can say "Dr X was not even board certified in EM!"
steve urkel wore a bow tie
his image... not bad ass.![]()
Steve Urkel did not wear a bow tie. I don't think you can find one image of him wearing a bow tie...his schtick was suspenders.
http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&q=steve+urkel&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wi
Bow ties are bad ass
Here is the biggest crux of the argument. If other docs could do it, why does every clinic end up sending somebody to the ED to treat something they aren't handled to treat? How many times have we gotten the falls, chest pains, abdominal pains, rectal bleeds, and the rest from IM, FM, and surgery clinics?
Exactly. You guys gotta understand that the EM doc is there to make sure the patient is stable and then get help from other docs for the definitive care of the patient...unless it's for things that most docs should be able to manage without help anyway. That's why docs trained in some other specialties (FM, IM, General Surgery) can cover the ER and do almost anything as well as a pure EM doc. And that's where, dare I say, the insecurity of a good number of people in EM comes from...that they know the old stereotype of them being a glorified triage nurse has a fair amount of truth to it.
Not exactly what people have specified, but not a bad start either:
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/els/07364679/2000/00000019/00000002/art00218
Malpractice occurrence in Emergency Medicine: Does residency training make a difference?1
Authors: Branney S.W.1; Pons P.T.; Markovchick V.J.; Thomasson G.O.
Source: Journal of Emergency Medicine, Volume 19, Number 2, August 2000 , pp. 99-105(7)
Abstract:
We evaluated the effects of Emergency Medicine (EM) residency training, EM board certification, and physician experience on the occurrence of malpractice claims and indemnity payments. This was a retrospective review of closed malpractice claims from a single insurer. Outcome measures included the occurrence of claims resulting in indemnity, indemnity amounts, and defense costs. Differences in the outcome measures were compared based on: EM residency training, EM board certification, EM residency training versus other residency training, and physician experience using both univariate and multivariate analyses. There were 428 closed EM claims with indemnity paid in 81 (18.9%). Indemnity was paid in 22.4% of closed claims against non-EM residency-trained physicians, and in only 13.3% against EM residency-trained physicians (p = 0.04). The total indemnity was $6,214,475. Non-EM trained physicians accounted for $4,440,951 (71.5%), EM residency-trained physicians accounted for $1,773,524 (28.5%). The average indemnity was $76,721 and the average defense cost was $17,775. There were no significant differences in the mean indemnity paid per closed claim or the mean cost to defend a closed claim when comparing EM-trained and non-EM residency-trained physicians. The total cost (indemnity + defense costs) per physician-year of malpractice coverage was $4,905 for non-EM residency-trained physicians and $2,212 for EM residency-trained physicians. EM residency-trained physicians account for significantly less malpractice indemnity than non-EM residency-trained physicians. This difference is not due to differences in the average indemnity but is due to significantly fewer closed claims against EM residency-trained physicians with indemnity paid. This results in a cost per physician-year of malpractice coverage for non-EM residency-trained physicians that is over twice that of EM residency-trained physicians.
Docs in clinics send patients to the ER because that's the pathway to hospital admission, many diagnostic studies, possibly surgical intervention, etc., NOT to take advantage of the superior management or diagnostic skills of the ER doc.
Originally Posted by nolagas
Docs in clinics send patients to the ER because that's the pathway to hospital admission, many diagnostic studies, possibly surgical intervention, etc., NOT to take advantage of the superior management or diagnostic skills of the ER doc.
So what you're saying is that you're too stupid to perform a direct admit? Can't get studies as an inpatient? Can't send someone to the OR without stopping by to see the ED?
and when you call EMS for one, their protocol dictates the patient goes to the ED. EMTs don't take patients to the floor.
If you have a legitimately ill patient - this month I've sent a hypotensive new-onset afib with RVR and a crushing chest pain to the ED - who drove themselves to their appt that day (and most of my patients do drive themselves), you can't very well have them drive to the hospital. They're getting there via ambulance, and when you call EMS for one, their protocol dictates the patient goes to the ED. EMTs don't take patients to the floor. I'd prefer direct admits, and so would patients. They're cheaper and easier on the patient and family.
Yes, then the ED serves a purpose, and you are arguing with the OP in saying that there is a need for people trained to take care of patients with high acuity. Unstable SVT, ACS, you name it, this is bread and butter emergency medicine.If you have a legitimately ill patient - this month I've sent a hypotensive new-onset afib with RVR and a crushing chest pain to the ED - who drove themselves to their appt that day (and most of my patients do drive themselves), you can't very well have them drive to the hospital.
You can't direct admit using an ambulance? What planet do you live on? If they need advanced life support, then maybe they should stop in the ED to be stabilized. If they don't, one can have the men with badges roll that stretcher right through the front door, up the elevator, and to the room one has obtained for them previously if one isn't a lazy bastard.They're getting there via ambulance, and when you call EMS for one, their protocol dictates the patient goes to the ED. EMTs don't take patients to the floor. I'd prefer direct admits, and so would patients. They're cheaper and easier on the patient and family.
I've had people come from surgery clinics to have lacerations sewn. I've had people have to come back to the ED to have sutures removed from their surgery because the clinic couldn't find the time to have a nurse remove them.
Lots of places have system problems, and lots of places abuse whatever group doesn't have the best representation at the table. Really medicine needs to as a whole stop the "me against the world" idea, and work together before other groups take over because there isn't a unified front.Well, that's obviously a system problem at your institution because I've never heard of such ridiculousness.
Lots of places have system problems, and lots of places abuse whatever group doesn't have the best representation at the table. Really medicine needs to as a whole stop the "me against the world" idea, and work together before other groups take over because there isn't a unified front.
But the biggest PITAs, IMHO during medical school and residency, were the Pediatricians. That doesn't mean that all Pediatricians are that way, it was just my experience.
Lots of places have system problems, and lots of places abuse whatever group doesn't have the best representation at the table. Really medicine needs to as a whole stop the "me against the world" idea, and work together before other groups take over because there isn't a unified front.
Here, Here!!! Enough of this infighting and backbiting (unless it's b/n consenting adults). We need to attack the real enemy.
Sorry OP but if you think any job in medicine is going to give you a bad ass persona you are mistaken. You want to be a marine then join the corps. No one in the general public is ever going to mistake you for a bad ass by going into medicine no matter what residency you do.
Quite frankly you sound like "someone in the basement playing zelda and dungeons and dragons while trading magic cards" who's hoping that a career in EM will transform you into some kind of stud.
Steve Urkel did not wear a bow tie. I don't think you can find one image of him wearing a bow tie...his schtick was suspenders.
http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&q=steve+urkel&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wi
Bow ties are bad ass
That's why docs trained in some other specialties (FM, IM, General Surgery) can cover the ER and do almost anything as well as a pure EM doc. And that's where, dare I say, the insecurity of a good number of people in EM comes from...that they know the old stereotype of them being a glorified triage nurse has a fair amount of truth to it.
For God's sake!! There is nothing with D&D and Zelda damn it!!!
here's a you tube clip of an episode of family matters, where steve urkel is wearing a bow tie! 🙂
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1qqYWDalS8k
another non bad ass wearer of the bow tie would have been carlton, from fresh prince of bel air. granted, he didn't wear the bow tie at all times.
![]()
Interesting article, but this line is pretty telling.
"As a marker of physician experience, we evaluated the years since completion of medical school training at the time of the closed claim to attempt to compare individuals with no residency training, just an internship, or residency training of various lengths." 😱
I was pretty taken in until I saw that. I can't find a table which details the actual specialties of the "non EM trained physicians". With the inclusion of an unspecified (though I could EASILY have missed it) number of non-residency trained physicians, I am left questioning the results of the entire study.
"It has been suggested that physician experience plays a large role in the occurrence of malpractice closed claims, with fewer closed claims occurring as physicians gain experience. As a marker of physician experience, we evaluated the years since completion of medical school training at the time of the closed claim to attempt to compare individuals with no residency training, just an internship, or residency training of various lengths. There was a statistically significant difference between the EM residency-trained group (10.5 years to closed claim) and the non-residency-trained group (14.6 years to closed claim). However, the interpretation of these data is not clear. Some of the difference is due to older individuals in the non-residency-trained group, as well as those who practiced in other areas of Medicine before pursuing careers in Emergency Medicine."
"Although the non-residency-trained physicians accounted for only 5.7% more physician-years of malpractice insurance coverage, they generated 71.5% of the indemnity paid out and had 66% more closed claims where indemnity was paid. Both the ratios of defense costs and indemnity paid per physician-year of malpractice coverage for non-residency-trained emergency physicians were twice as great as for those physicians with EM residency training.
These differences hold true even when comparing individuals with EM residency training to those with residency training in another specialty and Emergency Department experience (PTC-Physicians). The PTC-physician group accounted for 74% more closed claims where indemnity was paid than did the EM residency-trained physicians, a difference that was also statistically significant. Residency training in EM was associated with fewer malpractice closed claims in which indemnity was paid when compared to physicians who are not EM residency-trained, even if they were trained in another specialty."
"Finally, physicians with EM residency training were compared to physicians with residency training in another specialty and at least 5 years of Emergency Medicine malpractice coverage with COPIC (comparable to what was the American Board of Emergency Medicine practice track criteria for EM board certification). There were 165 closed claims filed against EM residency-trained physicians with indemnity paid in 22 cases (13%, 95% CI 7.7–18.1%) totaling $1,773,524. For those physicians with residency training in another specialty and 5 years experience (practice tract criteria, or PTC-physicians), there were 212 closed claims with indemnity paid in 49 cases (23%, 95% CI 17.3–28.7%) totaling $3,482,206. This difference was statistically different (χ2, p = 0.02)."
There are also a few letters to the editor that rip the article apart for multiple reasons.
If you have a legitimately ill patient - this month I've sent a hypotensive new-onset afib with RVR and a crushing chest pain to the ED - who drove themselves to their appt that day (and most of my patients do drive themselves), you can't very well have them drive to the hospital. They're getting there via ambulance, and when you call EMS for one, their protocol dictates the patient goes to the ED. EMTs don't take patients to the floor. I'd prefer direct admits, and so would patients. They're cheaper and easier on the patient and family.
I've never heard of "protocols" dictating all ambo pts must go to the ER...
It's called an ALS ambulance (private company, interfacility transport); call the house sup and the accepting doc, arrange for the ALS transport, and voila, a direct admit...
It's easy to dismiss a study on a few lines taken out of context. Here's the full paragraph:
...
Actually, two paragraphs up they make specific comparison between EM-residency trained and other residency trained but with 5 years of EM experience:
...
A little further up:
...
I only see two in the July 2001 issue - from Drs. Schorin and Dajer. Neither seems to 'rip' apart the study as you characterize it, and the authors did respond in a meaningful way. Am I missing subsequent letters?
"There were 165 closed claims filed against EM residency-trained physicians with indemnity paid in 22 cases (13%, 95% CI 7.718.1%) totaling $1,773,524. For those physicians with residency training in another specialty and 5 years experience (practice tract criteria, or PTC-physicians), there were 212 closed claims with indemnity paid in 49 cases (23%, 95% CI 17.328.7%) totaling $3,482,206."
The confidence intervals for the two indemnity percentages actually overlap.
Sorry, their were a couple of editorial letters which rip apart the article, not a few.
The largest EM issue right now is not this minor direct admit/eval/whatever nonsense. It is the fact that on average, admitted patients have a long wait in the ED, and take up space that the people in the waiting room can't use.
ACEP tried to get it passed where the hospital isn't paid for patients boarded in the ED, but that didn't pass (and never had a chance) because the hospitals won't stand for that, and they are the biggest lobby out there for healthcare (well, the AARP is close). This is also why residents couldn't have the match stopped, because the hospitals knew their supply of free labor and 100K paychecks per resident might get shut down. So it has a Congressional pass to the Sherman Anti-Trust Act.
For Alternate, while the CI might overlap ever so slightly, look at the total payout to see if you have a difference between the two groups.
i must admit, that's a first. pediatricians the biggest PITAs? some of us are gunshy after being burned too many times by otherwise adult oriented folks trying to kill our patients (my most recent experience was a DKA in the ED) but i think the average @sshole quotient for peds is lower than everyone else 🙂
--your friendly neighborhood friendly caveman
Lots of places have system problems, and lots of places abuse whatever group doesn't have the best representation at the table. Really medicine needs to as a whole stop the "me against the world" idea, and work together before other groups take over because there isn't a unified front.
I agree...that's why it was such a suprise and I chalked it up to my medical school experience. However, in residency many of the pediatric SPECIALISTS (maybe that's the smoking gun) were rude and condescending to the surgical residents...then again, everyone is rude and condescending to residents in the NICU and PICU!
There is a point in peds residency where two groups emerge. The 'cuddly bear costume homeopathy isn't all that bad' crowd that goes straight into primary care and the 'shucks, I ended up in peds and will starve for my latter days unless I get into peds-GI and make bank' crowd. The former are for the most part laid back, enjoy their job and as primary care peds don't have much interaction with the rest of the medical universe. The latter are a PITA, very insecure about anything but a sub-area of their specialty (worlds expert on basophilic gastroenteritis but can't scope if someones life depended on it) and compensate for their insecurity by being rude to:
- their patients parents
- their residents
- their colleagues
- all those consult services that are just out to kill their patients (first and foremost the GS residents who cover the peds-surg service at night when the peds-surg fellow who has to cover 12 hospitals is asleep).
But sometimes, especially when you have a FULL waiting room, disposition is what matters most. So if the patient's going to get admitted b/c they're sick, there are times when the work up isn't finished since it can be finished on the floor.....Where I'm doing my residency, the admission rate is about 20-25%, and our waiting room is more often than not, full. But on days where the volume is constant, we have to "move the meat" since there will be sick people that have been waiting for hours that need to be seen.
So what you're saying is that you're too stupid to perform a direct admit? Can't get studies as an inpatient? Can't send someone to the OR without stopping by to see the ED?
No, it is because they are too ****ing lazy to do the work themselves, so they make the ED do it. The ED is treated like a residency position in that they are always there, so might as well make them do something that you could do yourself. Someone calls your call line complaining of something? Don't ask them questions or call in a med, send them to the ED. Someone in your clinic sick? Don't slow down clinic to work with them, call an ambulance to send them to the ED. I've had people come from surgery clinics to have lacerations sewn. I've had people have to come back to the ED to have sutures removed from their surgery because the clinic couldn't find the time to have a nurse remove them.
So when an FP/pediatrician/IM in clinic sends a sick patient to the ED, they are being "too ****ing lazy to do the work themselves" to not "slow down clinic to work with them", yet it is perfectly acceptable for an EM physician to "move the meat" and not stop and do a work up before paging out a consult when they get busy since they have a full waiting room? Interesting......🙄
So when an FP/pediatrician/IM in clinic sends a sick patient to the ED, they are being "too ****ing lazy to do the work themselves" to not "slow down clinic to work with them", yet it is perfectly acceptable for an EM physician to "move the meat" and not stop and do a work up before paging out a consult when they get busy since they have a full waiting room? Interesting......🙄
How is it you quote two people and then use both of them to form a unified opinion? The only time the consult is called before the workup is complete is if the patient is going to be admitted anyway. Therefore, it doesn't matter if their admission diagnosis is COPD exacerbation or pneumonia, or sepsis, or any number of things. Medical problems that demand admission might differ a little between some nuances, but they still require a bed, so getting that ball started before knowing everything isn't a bad problem.
Calling consults before knowing anything about a patient or even laying eyes on them is pretty chicken-**** and I don't find it acceptable, so you won't find me saying that.
perhaps you should clarify that "it doesn't matter to the er physician if their admission diagnosis is copd exacerbation or pneumonia, or sepsis, or any number of things."
it matters to medicare... it matters to other insurers...
it matters to the patient and the patient's family...
it matters to the hospital in terms of the level of acuity that's needed for the patient, and the medicines that may (or may not be) indicated...
it matters to the admitting physician in terms of his/her liability for taking care of the patient as well as his/her getting paid...
it matters to the hospital in terms of getting paid...
and in many ways it should matter to the er physician since the paperwork and documentation should support what he/she has done... and what he/she is going to bill for...