“I enjoy the variety in my career as a physician and the quality of my life,” he concludes.
The New Hospitalist
Becoming a hospitalist seemed a logical step for Dr. Eddy when he opted to leave full-time office practice in 1999. Brantford General Hospital, where he had admitting privileges, covered a catchment area of 80,000 people.
When the only two other hospitals in the area were closed, Brantford General was overwhelmed. Adding to the systemic distress, 80% of community doctors had given up their hospital privileges. Hospitalists were urgently needed to pick up the slack. Dr. Eddy went for it.
In Canada, hospital throughput isn’t a priority. The system lacks enough sub-acute and rehab beds to discharge patients from hospitals in a timely fashion, leaving patients hospitalized longer compared with similar care in the United States. The average length of stay for heart failure is 6.1 days in the U.S. versus 8.5 days in Canada; for aortic aneurysm repair it’s seven days (U.S.) versus nine days (Canada), according to the Journal of Cardiology.
Those bottlenecks lead to hospitalized patients ready for a less acute level of care occupying beds needed for acute patients. For example, patients wait months for knee replacement surgery, then spend three to four weeks on the rehab ward in the hospital. A step-down facility would probably be ideal but doesn’t exist. “There are people lying in the ER overnight, people who need to be in palliative care units who are in acute care beds,” Dr. Eddy notes. “It is very tough.”
As a family physician, Dr. Eddy favored a hospitalist career because he would have the time to do a general assessment—a whole-patient, complete check-up. He doesn’t admit patients or work in the ED (“Not my forte; I’m not looking for more stress,” he says), but works on the general medical units.
According to Dr. Legere, the septuagenarian physician works approximately 75% of full-time hospitalist hours. He puts in at least 40 weeks a year and covers at least 10 weekends for the hospitalist service.
Hospitalist Larry Kramer, MD, who has worked side by side with Dr. Eddy since 2002, calls him a compassionate, sensitive physician attuned to the small kindnesses patients and family appreciate, such as remembering everyone’s name.
“He’s an excellent team member, always open to referrals and consultations,” says Dr. Kramer, who’s also impressed with Dr. Eddy’s interest in mastering a Palm Pilot when he discovered how much easier and faster it was to access clinical and pharmaceutical information. “He didn’t grow up with computers, but he sure learned how to use his Palm,” adds Dr. Kramer.
The Office Practice
When he started his hospitalist career, Dr. Eddy fully intended to relinquish the office practice to another family physician. It didn’t happen that way—there were about 200 patients he couldn’t give up.