Pluses and Minuses
Martin C. Johns, MD, a rural internal medicine and pediatrics hospitalist at Gifford Medical Center in Randolph, Vt., sees some definite advantages to being a lone hospitalist, a post he has held for the 1 1/2 years. “It allowed me the time to interact with all the other modalities and to establish with physician therapy, occupational therapy, care management, pharmacy, what was lacking in the previous model with a variety of docs covering,” Dr. Johns says. “I was trying to create standards that made sense for everyone. The establishment of my being the only hospitalist was determinant primarily on my ability to create those relationships and ensure that they were solid, and also to have the support of all the primary care doctors.”
Gifford’s administration was also supportive. “Because we are a critical access hospital, there are certain restrictions and requirements that we have to take into consideration with Medicare and Medicaid,” Dr. Johns says. “Being the sole hospitalist as we’re expanding allowed me to set the stage: what was lacking, what was missing, what we could improve on, what was already working quite well. [I incorporated] the help of the administration to fill in the gaps of what we needed.”
The primary nonclinical challenge for the lone hospitalist is finding patients to care for and doctors to share coverage. Christopher Farrar, MD, lead hospitalist at Anderson Hospital in Maryville, Ill., began the program there. His employer, the hospitalist company Inpatient Management Inc., based in St. Louis, Mo., manages 18 hospitalist programs in 12 states. “As I was ending my primary care role,” says Dr. Farrar, “this opportunity came available. I think that they weren’t expecting someone to jump in so quickly. They didn’t have the luxury of time to find another physician right away.”