Scope of Practice
Laborists typically provide care to all unassigned patients who present to labor and delivery, and perform deliveries, C-sections, and other services on patients when requested by OBs in traditional practice. Requests arise when an OB simply needs to be relieved of being on call for their private patients, or when an emergency arises. (These “as-needed” referrals are different from the most common arrangement for “medical hospitalist” practices that ask other doctors to refer all or none of their patients, not just when they are otherwise occupied.)
Lastly, the laborist might serve as surgical assistant to other OBGYNs. In nearly all settings, there is no need to require that any physicians refer to the laborist, and the other OBs are free to decide when to refer.
A reasonably common scenario is that, to avoid disruption of scheduled office hours, an OB in traditional practice might ask that the laborist manage a patient who presents in labor. But if still undelivered at the close of office hours, the traditional OB might assume care from that point on or have the laborist remain responsible through delivery. The traditional OB usually will make post-partum “rounding” visits on all of their patients but could rely on the laborist for these visits.
In most cases, the laborist does not have any scheduled gynecologic procedures, though he or she may see GYN consults throughout the hospital as time permits. Laborists typically have no outpatient responsibilities, but some OBGYN hospitalists cover GYN in the ED.
Operational Structure
Although models vary significantly, the single most common arrangement is for laborists to work 24-hour, in-house shifts. Rarely is there a need or justification to have more than one laborist on at a time. For a single physician, seven or eight 24-hour shifts per month is considered full-time. My experience is that most laborists are employed by the hospital in which they work.
As is the case in every specialty, some large OBGYN groups adopt a rotating laborist model, in which one member of their group becomes the laborist for 24 hours at a time, during which they are relieved of all other responsibilities.
Recruitment
ObGynHospitalist.com shows that, as of July, 40 of the 132 laborist programs that had identified themselves on the site were recruiting. My experience is that unlike “medical hospitalist” practices, which tend to successfully recruit those very early in their career, or “surgical hospitalist” programs, which target mid- to late-career general surgeons, laborist candidates come from any point in their careers. Most programs prefer that a laborist has several years of post-residency experience, but they generally have no other preference.
Dr. Nelson has been a practicing hospitalist since 1988 and is cofounder and past president of SHM. He is a principal in Nelson Flores Hospital Medicine Consultants, a national hospitalist practice management consulting firm (www.nelsonflores.com). He is course codirector and faculty for SHM’s “Best Practices in Managing a Hospital Medicine Program” course. This column represents his views and is not intended to reflect an official position of SHM.