6 things wrong with hospital medicine

https://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2018/09/6-things-wrong-with-hospital-medicine.html

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In 2002, when I began my first hospitalist job, I was a dyed-in-the-wool hospital medicine convert, convinced that the transfer of inpatient care to true specialists in hospital medicine (hospitalists) would dramatically improve the quality and efficiency of inpatient care, increase patient satisfaction and decrease costs.

By 2008, I had developed serious doubts, which prompted me to publish an editorial in the Journal of Hospital Medicine, entitled “The Expanding or Shrinking Universe of the Hospitalist” (2008) that attempted to raise a red flag of concern about hospitalists, in general, failing to become “hospital medicine specialists” and instead accepting the inferior role of “triage shift workers.”

Now, in 2018, I believe it is more appropriate to raise a white flag of surrender. I could write a book on the topic, but briefly, here are the six pillars of what went wrong with hospital medicine, in my opinion.

 

First pillar. In the first decade of the hospitalist movement, private hospitalist management groups (and hospital-employed hospitalist groups) popped up quickly all over the country, jockeying aggressively for market share, and working with a simple equation: a hospitalist physician was a fixed cost, and his/her patient load (primarily) was revenue. So the larger the patient load per hospitalist, the greater the profit. Young hospitalist applicants — almost all fresh out of training, in debt, hungry for income and already accustomed to long hours of work — were easily lured to the hospitalist positions offering the highest salaries, which were logically accompanied by the highest patient loads. Rising salaries were repeatedly celebrated by hospitalist leaders as evidence of the growing value of hospitalists, whereas they were more likely a result of the above market forces.

 

Second pillar. The high workloads resulted, quite naturally, in hospitalists aligning themselves in ways that increased patient encounters but minimized effort, which largely meant deferring responsibility for patient care and clinical decisions to others; that is, primarily, a liberal use of specialist consultations. In my experience, hospitalist progress notes quickly evolved into something like this: “Acute kidney injury, per nephrology; Chest pain, per cardiology; Cellulitis, per infectious disease.” Next patient. Time-consuming tasks, like end-of-life care discussions, were whittled down to a single line: “Consult palliative care.” (One hospitalist colleague actually explained to me once how he strategically avoided patients whose families were currently in the room, since he had to see over 30 patients a day on weekends and couldn’t spare the time for any family discussions.) Obviously, this short-sighted approach to a new medical specialty was a death blow to almost all of the claimed benefits of the hospital medicine movement.

 

Third pillar. With hospitalists increasingly dominating inpatient care, hospital administrators found that they could use this captive group of young doctors to increase hospital revenue by raising the case-mix index with “proper documentation.” Whereas comprehensive documentation of one’s clinical findings and decision making is certainly an essential part of quality inpatient care, the unspoken goal of the hospitals was to push the case-mix index higher and higher. A troponin of 0.05 became an NSTEMI. A cough and temperature of 99.5 became sepsis or severe sepsis (if there was a slight creatinine bump or relative hypotension) — and why not add acute respiratory failure, if someone happened to catch a low oxygen saturation reading (from a malpositioned pulse oximeter). In a darkly comical twist, the risk management mantra that “if you don’t document it, it didn’t happen” was tragically flipped into its false corollary: “If you do document it, it did happen”; that is, “oxygen saturation dropped to 85 percent on room air,” “patient was in severe respiratory distress,” etc. Unfortunately, this gray area of potentially exaggerated documentation muddies the clinical communication between clinicians, not to mention issues of ethics and law.

 

Fourth pillar. In much the same way, hospitalists were placed in the center of “level of care” assignments; that is, observation status versus inpatient status. Specifically, if an inpatient stay could be justified, by a “good” hospitalist’s “improved” documentation, the hospital could increase revenue by two to three times over an observation stay. Hospitalists were given subtle encouragement to transform things like atypical chest pain, UTI, or tingling fingers into life-threatening conditions, requiring complex decision making, and fraught with numerous potentially serious complications, and absolutely requiring more than two midnights to evaluate and treat properly. Once again, the ideal of a careful and proper diagnosis, with an appropriate plan of care in an appropriate setting, was profaned. Clinical decision making often blurred into a form of hospitalist doublespeak which obscured the actual severity of illness to achieve desirable metrics, earn a bonus or negotiate a better contract next cycle.

 

Fifth pillar. In addition, utilization review nurses were pressing hospitalists to get fixed-DRG patients out of the hospital as quickly as possible, to increase profit margins and make room for more patients and more revenue. This rapid-fire inpatient management r encouraged “good” hospitalists to order a shotgun round of tests and consultations up front on their admitted patients, and ultimately led to a lot of unnecessary testing, and a lost reliance on a proper history and exam, serial assessments and a cognitive, algorithmic approach to diagnosis and treatment — all further diminishing the clinical acumen of highly-trained individuals who truly could have been, in a different world, hospital medicine “specialists.”

 

Sixth pillar. Quality measures, supposedly aimed at improving patient outcomes, were an additional blow, as they unfortunately led physicians to do things that were not consistent with good clinical judgment. For example, in a case I saw, a patient presented with an acute tonic-clonic seizure, and their lactic acid level was markedly elevated (of course, from the seizure); but they were treated for sepsis with a fluid bolus and broad-spectrum antibiotics, because if someone saw the lactate level, the case would “fall out.” Similarly, triple antibiotic regimens were inappropriately used for viral bronchitis because of a stated concern for health care-associated pneumonia. Basically, non-thinking was being promoted in the service of higher quality scores — not higher quality.

 

Although these pillars are surely not generalizable to all hospitalist programs, especially academic ones, the hospitalist movement as a whole is a perfect example of how administrative and market forces in health care can largely extinguish the incredible potential of a new specialty. And that’s sad.

 

 

 

When Your ‘Regular Doctor’ Could Be Anyone

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Just what duty, if any, exists for doctors to keep tabs on their sickest patients?

“Will you be my regular doctor?” a new patient seeing me in my primary care clinic asked.

“Sort of,” I honestly answered.

She looked back at me quizzically.

“Technically speaking I will be your doctor,” I explained. “But you may have trouble scheduling an appointment with me and may have to see another doctor here at our group clinic at times. And if you need to get admitted to this hospital, other doctors who work there will take care of you.”

The patient seemed disappointed.

“I’m sorry,” I said. “But I’ll do my best to be available for you.”

It was not long ago that such words, coming from a doctor, would have been almost heretical. But logistical and philosophical changes in medicine have dramatically altered the doctor-patient relationship.

In clinic-based practices such as mine, patients may be told they may need to wait weeks or months in order to see their doctor. In the world of private medicine, some physicians now charge their patients extra annual fees for the privilege of seeing or speaking with their doctor more promptly.

Just how bad is this situation? Do patients followed by just one doctor do better or worse? And just what duty, if any, exists for doctors to keep tabs on their sickest patients?

My father, an infectious diseases specialist who practiced medicine from the 1950s to the 1990s, would have answered these questions: “Very bad,” “worse” and “a tremendous duty.” My dad was constantly vigilant, going to the hospital seven days a week, giving patients our home phone number and staying in touch with covering physicians when we were on vacation.

But things were different then. For one thing, it was expected that my father would follow his patients both in and out of the hospital. Today there are hospitalists — specialists in inpatient medicine who are in charge of admitted patients and specially trained to diagnose and treat illnesses requiring hospitalization. And my mother, like most doctors’ wives of a generation ago, did not expect my dad to be a co-parent. Medicine, after all, was a calling.

The reasons for the changes are diverse. For one thing, the growing number of women in medicine has helped bring a better work-life balance among physicians. In addition, the 1984 Libby Zion case, in which a young woman died while under the care of young doctors working 36-hour shifts, pointed out the potential dangers of sleep-deprived providers.

When I was a medical resident in the 1980s, the first “night floats”— doctors who covered the wards at night so other physicians could sleep or go home — appeared. To many doctors of my father’s era, this development was heresy. Medicine, they feared, was becoming “shift work.” Patients were passed from doctor to doctor, none of whom really “knew” them. With the advent of hospitalists, this fragmentation has gotten worse.

Fortunately, researchers are studying how well patients do in these competing types of systems. The 2016 FIRST trial, which received a lot of attention, found that patient safety was not compromised when doctors in training worked longer shifts.

But even when the data show that limiting work hours leads to as good or better care, physicians should not be content to play “doctor tag,” in which a physician or clinic simply designates a new provider to “take over” treatment. Just because a physician takes good care of someone during his or her shift does not mean that responsibility ends there.

It may be helpful to think about specialties within medicine that have long been associated with limited continuity, such as emergency or intensive-care medicine. In both of these venues, patients move in and out of treatment quickly and follow-up may be difficult. But it is not impossible.

In her new book, “You Can Stop Humming Now,” Dr. Daniela Lamas, a critical care specialist, recounts visits she made to patients after they had left her unit. In one case, she attends a party thrown by a man whose severe West Nile virus infection had initially made it unlikely he would ever return home. But now there he was, eating, chatting, “working the crowd” and reminding his son to videotape the event.

Dr. Lamas did this on her own time. But she found it immensely rewarding. “We rarely have the opportunity,” she writes, to follow patients “through long-term acute care hospitals, infections, delirium, readmissions, and maybe, if they are very lucky, back home to a life that looks something like what they left.” The patient and his wife seemed thrilled that she had come — not as his current doctor but as his past doctor who still cared.

And what of my patients? I have made a decision not to try to imitate my father, as much as I admire the type of doctor that he was. But patients deserve to have a “doctor,” despite the caveat to my new patient. Plus I have found that most physicians, at the end of the day, are control freaks, wanting to be in charge of their own patients.

So I try to stay in touch, by phone, computer or other messaging strategies. Patient portals, being implemented at many hospitals, now allow patients to leave messages for their physicians in secure ways that do not threaten confidentiality. And I “sneak in” patients with urgent issues when I am not scheduled in clinic but there are open rooms, such as early in the morning or during lunch. The generous staff members at my clinic help make this happen by registering these patients and getting their vital signs. My clinic is also pursuing strategies to increase the chance that patients can see their regular doctors.

My patients seem pleased when I go the extra mile. If I am willing to squeeze them in, they are willing to move around their schedules to come. But I just can’t promise I can or will always be available.

 

 

Physician Age Linked to Clinically Significant Patient Mortality Risk

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/physician-leaders/physician-age-linked-clinically-significant-patient-mortality-risk?spMailingID=11059722&spUserID=MTY3ODg4NTg1MzQ4S0&spJobID=1161579213&spReportId=MTE2MTU3OTIxMwS2#

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The difference in mortality rates translates into one additional patient death for every 77 patients treated by physicians 60 and older, compared with those treated by doctors 40 and younger.

Patients treated by older hospitalists are somewhat more likely to die within a month of admission than patients treated by younger physicians, suggests research published this week in the BJM.

Researchers at Harvard note that the difference in mortality rates was modest yet clinically significant—10.8% among patients treated by physicians 40 and younger, compared with 12.1% among those treated by physicians 60 and older.

That translates into one additional patient death for every 77 patients treated by physicians 60 and older, compared with those treated by doctors 40 and younger.

Study lead author Anupam B. Jena, MD, a hospitalist, and associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, spoke with HealthLeaders about the findings. The following is a lightly edited transcript.

A 20-year lookback: Has the hospitalist movement actually improved patient care?

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/healthcare/a-20-year-lookback-has-hospitalist-movement-actually-improved-patient-care

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http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp1607958?query=featured_home&

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp1608289?query=featured_home

In the last 20 years the healthcare industry has welcomed a new type of specialist that focuses on the general medical care of hospitalized patients. Since the concept was first introduced in 1996, 75 percent of U.S. hospitals now employ these hospitalists and the field has grown to 50,000 physicians.

And the specialty continues to expand with more physicians becoming post-acute care hospitalists and laborists.

But is hospital care better for it? That’s a question The New England Journal of Medicine explores in two new articles in recognition of the 20th anniversary of the field.

In many instances, hospitalists do add value to improve quality, safety and innovation,writes Robert M. Wachter, M.D., a professor at the University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine, and Lee Goldman, M.D., who works for the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, in the first commentary. And they believe that the model is the best way to guarantee hospitals provide high-quality, efficient inpatient care.

The model has led to reductions in length of stay, cost of hospitalization and readmission rates, but there are challenges.

“Although hospitalists have been leaders in developing systems (e.g., handoff protocols and post-discharge phone calls to patients) to mitigate harm from discontinuity, it remains the model’s Achilles’ heel,” they write.

The Tangled Hospital-Physician Relationship

http://healthaffairs.org/blog/2016/05/09/the-tangled-hospital-physician-relationship/

Blog_healthcare management

CHI’s Hospitalist Program Standardizes Care, Lowers Costs

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/page-1/FIN-315973/CHIs-Hospitalist-Program-Standardizes-Care-Lowers-Costs

Medicine and Dollars