Hospitalist

Hospitalist
A hospital-based general physician. Hospitalists assume the care of hospitalized patients in the place of patients’ primary care physician. The term "hospitalist" was first introduced in 1996 by RM Wachter and L Goldman to describe physicians who devote much of their professional time and focus to the care of hospitalized patients. In the most prevalent American model of hospitalist care, several doctors practice together as a group and work full-time caring for inpatients. Hospitalists are familiar figures. Doctors specializing in intensive care have long taken care of patients admitted to the ICU by primary care doctors; geriatricians working in nursing homes have often admitted patients to the care of their hospital-based colleagues; etc. "Thus," notes HC Sox, "the hospitalist model (of care) is not new (in the U.S.), but it is growing rapidly as a result of the role of managed care organizations, the increasing complexity of inpatient care, and the pressures of busy outpatient practices." References Wachter RM, Goldman L. The emerging role of "hospitalists" in the American health care system. N Engl J Med. 1996;335:514-7. Sox HC. The Hospitalist Model: Perspectives of the Patient, the Internist, and Internal Medicine. Ann Intern Med. 1999;130:368-372. The Annals of Internal Medicine issue of 16 February 1999 contains an excellent supplement devoted to "The Hospitalist Movement in the United States."
* * *
1. A physician whose professional activities are performed chiefly within a hospital, e.g., anesthesiologists, emergency department physicians, intensivists (intensive care specialists), pathologists, and radiologists. SYN: hospital-based physician. 2. A primary care physician (not a house officer) who assumes responsibility for the observation and treatment of hospitalized patients and returns them to the care of their private physicians when they are discharged from the hospital. [hospital + -ist] Hospitalists may be employees of a hospital or HMO, contractors, or private practitioners. Hospital-based primary care physicians free general practitioners from the need to make daily rounds to visit hospitalized patients. While the availability of physicians oriented to inpatient care improves the efficiency of health care delivery and shortens hospital stays, some have viewed it as a threat to the integrity of the traditional patient-physician relationship. Organized medicine has opposed contractual relationships, including managed-care arrangements, whereby private physicians are required to turn over to a h. the care of all patients admitted to a hospital. While this arrangement bears many similarities to the British system of consultants and general practitioners, some have noted that limiting primary care physicians to office practice may lead to a weakening of critical diagnostic and therapeutic skills and a decline of prestige among both colleagues and the public. The impact of the h. system on medical education and on the hospital staff system, whereby practitioners and consultants maintain staff “privileges” by providing inpatient care to their own patients in compliance with regulations or by-laws, has also raised concerns.

* * *

hos·pi·tal·ist 'häs-(.)pit-əl-əst n a physician who specializes in seeing and treating other physicians' hospitalized patients in order to minimize the number of hospital visits by the patients' regular physicians

* * *

hos·pi·tal·ist (hosґpĭ-təl-ist) a physician specializing in hospital inpatient care; called also hospital-based or inpatient physician.

Medical dictionary. 2011.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • hospitalist — n. A doctor who practices medicine only in a hospital. Example Citations: The medical center has also hired three hospitalists expected to draw as many as 300 new patients this year a move that Stephen Shortell, a health policy professor at the… …   New words

  • hospitalist — /hos pi tl ist/, n. a physician who specializes in treating hospitalized patients; a specialist in inpatient medicine. [1990 95; HOSPITAL + IST] * * * …   Universalium

  • hospitalist — noun a) A hospitaller b) A physician who specializes in the care of hospital in patients …   Wiktionary

  • hospitalist — hos•pi•tal•ist [[t]ˈhɒs pɪ tl ɪst[/t]] n. a physician who specializes in treating hospitalized patients; a specialist in inpatient medicine • Etymology: 1990–95 …   From formal English to slang

  • hospitalist — /ˈhɒspətələst/ (say hospuhtuhluhst) noun a medical practitioner who works in the public healthcare sector to provide cross specialty expertise and facilitate a patient s access to a variety of medical services. {hospital(ism) + ist; a system… …  

  • hospitalist — /hos pi tl ist/, n. a physician who specializes in treating hospitalized patients; a specialist in inpatient medicine. [1990 95; HOSPITAL + IST] …   Useful english dictionary

  • Hospital medicine — in the United States is the discipline concerned with the general medical care of hospitalized patients. Doctors, Physician Assistants or Nurse Practitioners whose primary professional focus is hospital medicine are called hospitalists; this type …   Wikipedia

  • Inpatient care — is the care of patients whose condition requires admission to a hospital. Progress in modern medicine and the advent of comprehensive out patient clinics ensure that patients are only admitted to a hospital when they are extremely ill or are have …   Wikipedia

  • Martin A. Samuels — Martin A. Samuels, MD, DSc (hon), FAAN, MACP, FRCP, is an eminent American physician, teacher of medicine and internationally recognized expert in the field of neurology. A leading authority on the relationships between neurology and the rest of… …   Wikipedia

  • surgicalist — n. A surgeon who works exclusively in a hospital. [Shortening of surgical hospitalist.] Example Citations: He s on call 24 hours day, ready to perform an appendectomy, remove a gall bladder, or do a surgery another doctor can t get to. It s just… …   New words

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”