What Is the Big Deal Here?
A lot of smart people have developed and written about systems that assign hospitalists geographically, but in most cases this has not been accompanied by adjustments in the way nurses are assigned. On nursing units at most hospitals, this means that even if a hospitalist has all of her patients on the same floor, she is still interacting with five to seven nurses caring for her patients. That usually means the hospitalist and nurse have less awareness of each other’s thinking and doing than if the ratio is reduced to no more than three or four nurses for a single hospitalist.
Dr. Mebust provided a document enumerating the goals for the program:
- Improve communication;
- Reduce patient bed moves;
- Improve patient and staff satisfaction; and
- Provide more efficient care as measured in time-of-discharge, decreased physician time-per-patient, and possibly length of stay.
Because of a number of problems teasing out the effects of this program and its limited duration to this point, Dr. Mebust and staff can’t provide robust statistics to document success in these goals. But anecdotal information is very encouraging, and clearly the nurses love it.
A major barrier to assigning nurses based rigidly on patients in adjacent rooms is the inability to ensure that each nurse has a workload of roughly equivalent complexity, but they’ve found this is a much less significant problem than feared. The nurse I spoke with said any risk of ending up with unusually complex and time-consuming patients is essentially offset by the efficiency gained by having the same attending hospitalist for all of her patients.
In fact, the nurses love it so much that they much prefer being assigned to a pod rather than a traditional assortment of patients with different attending physicians, even if the latter offers a chance to address uneven acuity.
The Big Picture
I’ve often wished that I could incorporate into hospitalist work some of the efficient ways a doctor and nurse can work together seeing scheduled patients in an outpatient setting. Surely assigning hospitalists geographically does this to some degree and has a number of advantages that others have written about. But it comes at the cost of difficult tradeoffs for hospitalists, and I know of many groups that have abandoned it after concluding that the challenges of the system exceeded its benefits.
But when it is coupled with assigning nurses geographically, I think the benefits are even greater, not only for the hospitalists, but also for patients, nurses, and other hospital staff.
Next time you’re in Cooperstown, be sure you don’t just visit the Baseball Hall of Fame. Look up Dr. Mebust, Komron Ostovar, MD, and their colleagues at Bassett Medical Center. I betcha you’ll be persuaded to see the value of their geographic model.
And maybe you’ll even fall so far under the spell of how they all talk about where they work and live that you’ll be ready to move there and join them.
Dr. Nelson has been a practicing hospitalist since 1988. He is co-founder and past president of SHM, and principal in Nelson Flores Hospital Medicine Consultants. He is co-director for SHM’s “Best Practices in Managing a Hospital Medicine Program” course. Write to him at [email protected].