Substitution by non-physician practitioners will mitigate some of the effects of the shortfall. We can anticipate that the use of nurse practitioners, physician assistants, nurses, and health educators will increase in situations where they can substitute for lower intensity medical care—especially in primary care settings, outpatient environments, and as adjuncts to care delivered by proceduralists and surgeons of many types. This will make some difference in the overall expectation for reduced availability of physicians.
Given all of these inputs, all projections point to a shortage of physicians, but none of the analyses agree on the absolute size.
The Effects of the Shortage
In any event, the projected shortage will affect how hospitals support their various service lines and, thus, will impact on the work performed by hospitalists, intensivists, and other physicians who support that work in hospitals. Hospitals anticipate this effect at the intersection of the shortage with increasing demands for rapid throughput, thorough and safe care for patients, and accountability for clearly specified clinical outcomes. Hospitals are already worrying about how to staff neurosurgery, cardiology, and general surgery positions. Changes in how primary care is delivered will affect where patient referrals come from and hospitals’ relationship with their specialist physicians.
How Will a Shortage Affect Hospitalists?
Increasing demand for services: With fewer physicians choosing general or primary care practice, hospitalists will find increasing demand for their services as coverage for acute care. Fewer primary care physicians will be able to afford the luxury of inpatient practice and gravitate toward highly efficient outpatient office-based practice while referring acute care to their hospitalist colleagues and specialists to pick up the slack for specific procedures, hospital follow-up care and return on discharge.
Hospitalists will be responsible then for a larger population of inpatients, providing for comprehensive care management in coordinating the services for all the care needs of many different types of diagnoses.
Increasing span of influence: In addition, there will be increasing demand by procedure-oriented physicians for hospitalist coverage to improve their efficiency in providing acute specialty care. Some of this demand may spill into single-specialty outpatient and focused freestanding hospital environments. Hospitalists will be pulled to cover specialists, who find their efficiency and the volume of work required prohibits them from providing comprehensive inpatient care for complex patients. They will prefer to focus on procedural interventions. Orthopedic surgery, cardiac surgery, neurosurgery, and cardiology, in particular, are likely to be new clients for hospitalist services.
Increasing emphasis on multidisciplinary care: Given the demand for evidence-based outcomes, hospitalists will provide physician input into clinical care design for a greater variety of patients in an increasing span of clinical service lines. This will put a demand on hospitalists for skills related to teamwork, leadership, and management in group environments. It will also require hospitalists to become broadly knowledgeable about the skills and contributions of all other potential care providers.
The New Medical Staff
The looming physician shortage in the United States will significantly affect the demand for and the variety and scope of work that hospitalists perform. The number of medical specialties dependent on hospitalist services will broaden. And hospitals will turn to hospitalists as their primary medical staff partners, responsible for the majority of medical staff functions and responsibilities. TH
Mike Guthrie, MD, is executive in residence at the University of Colorado (Denver) School of Business, Program in Health Administration, and a faculty member of SHM’s Leadership Academy.