What about the more competitive fields (e.g. ortho, derm, rads)?
Edit: Title should read What Fields***
Edit: Title should read What Fields***
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Every singe note I see by any surgical specialty (aside from consults) are tiny. That said, I imagine consults feed a large proportion of surgical cases. EM notes are pretty darn skimpy, too.I thought the cardiac surgeons probably had the least paperwork. Most of their patients had been worked up by cardiology, so most clinic visits resulted in an operation. Ten minutes of "hihowareya, sign the consent here" could result in a 3-6 hour operation. The PAs wrote most/all of the notes, orders and D/C summaries. The surgeon usually dictated the op notes and not much more.
Great distinctions!Ophtho wins hands down. Their notes are mostly acronyms, diagrams, and drawings. That being said, ophtho clinic is pretty brutal and the patient volume is higher than most, so that may balance things out to some extent.
Psych & neuro notes are long, but their volumes are relatively low so the burden seems lighter to me. In-patient psych has an assload of paperwork to deal with, but their census is relatively low compared to the other services so again, it didn't seem so oppressive to me.
The apex of paperwork misery is primary care, IMO. They get shafted with many of the absurd government forms like SSDI, which can take ~90 mins to fill out if done correctly. On top of that, their chart notes need to capture a lot of petty detail which may become important later.
SICU notes and the cardiac surgery notes (written by PAs) are fairly sizeable. They're certainly longer than some hospitalist notes.Every singe note I see by any surgical specialty (aside from consults) are tiny. That said, I imagine consults feed a large proportion of surgical cases. EM notes are pretty darn skimpy, too.
Prowler, how would you compare your GS paperwork load to those in medical specialties?
(I'd say neurology and psychiatry have the longest notes, followed by IM.)
Huh, I never would've expected that. And great point regarding NPs/PAs. That's certainly a hot topic these days. They're a huge plus for academic surgeons, though, as they lighten the load without affecting their (comparatively lower than private practice) salaries. Thanks for elaborating!SICU notes and the cardiac surgery notes (written by PAs) are fairly sizeable. They're certainly longer than some hospitalist notes.
There's still plenty of paperwork in general surgery. Office consults, follow-up visits, re-admissions, etc. all contribute to paperwork. Op notes, d/c summaries, etc. I'm not sure I will want a mid-level provider, because I don't know if the amount of work they would save me would warrant the salary they usually command. It kind of depends on your practice environment.
Awesome contribution! Thanks for taking the time to stop by, Smurfette!Gen surg has plenty of paperwork, but the number of refill requests, routine labs, and other similar tests is much, much less than primary care. However, precerts for tests and surgeries (done by my office staff) and FMLA, insurance and other paperwork (started by my staff but signed off and restrictions completed by me) are pretty common. Overall, GS is less administrative stuff, but since I am not in primary care, I have no experience with which I can compare it.
And there are some things NP/PAs cannot fill out. Some things must be by the attending physician. My PA handles a lot of hospital-related paperwork, but the routine stuff that streams into the office from pharmacies, employers and insurance companies generally gets sent to me.