OBJECTIVE:Although hospitalists have been shown to improve both financial and educational outcomes, their ability to manage dual roles as clinicians and educators has been infrequently demonstrated, particularly in the community setting where large numbers of residents train. We evaluated the impact of hospitalists on financial and educational outcomes at a midsized community teaching hospital 1 year after implementation. DESIGN:Two hospitalist clinician educators ( HCEs) were hired to provide inpatient medical care while participating in resident education. Length of stay and cost per case data were calculated for all patients admitted to the hospitalist service during their first year and compared with patients admitted to private physicians. The hospitalists' top 11 discharge diagnoses were individually assessed. For the same time period, categorical medicine residents ( N = 36) were given an anonymous written survey to assess the HCEs' impact on resident education and service. RESULTS:Resource consumption: length of stay was reduced by 20.8% and total cost per case was reduced by 18.4% comparing the HCEs with community-based physicians. Reductions in both length of stay and cost per case were noted for 8 of the 11 most common discharge diagnoses. Resident survey: over 75% of residents responded, with all noting improvement in the quality of attending rounds, bedside teaching, and the overall inpatient experience. Residents' roles as teachers and team leaders were largely unchanged. A driving force behind the expansion of the hospitalist movement is the potential to deliver high-quality medical care while decreasing inpatient costs and improving efficiency. Several institutions have demonstrated that both length of stay (LOS) and cost per case (C/C) have been reduced through the use of hospitalists. CONCLUSION:1-6 On average, hospitalists have been reported to reduce LOS by 16.6% and C/C by 13.4%. 1 Such decreases have been shown in both academic 2,3 and community-based institutions. [4][5][6] Though economic forces ultimately drive the utilization of hospitalists, other outcomes, such as the benefit of hospitalists on the medical education of internal medicine residents and medical students, have been explored to a limited extent. 7 In one large university medical center, residents expressed satisfaction with the teaching provided by hospitalists and reported that it was equivalent and often superior to that of traditional ward attendings. 2 In fact, these residents requested that hospitalists be a part of all of their future inpatient ward rotations. Another university medical center found that the presence of hospitalists improved the quality of attending rounds, increased the emphasis on resident education during inpatient rotations, and enhanced residents' overall learning experience. 8Despite the fact that hospitalists often serve in dual roles as clinicians and educators, there are few data on their ability to effectively manage these roles simultaneously. For academic community-based teaching hospital...
We present a case report of the first adult woman reported to suffer from both urethral obstruction and bilateral ureteral hydronephroses secondary to fecal impaction. The work-up suggested that hypothyroidism might be the cause for fecal impaction. Urinary tract obstruction caused by hypothyroidism-induced fecal impaction has never been reported. Fecal impaction should be considered as one of the causes for urinary tract obstruction.
In 1999, Norwalk Hospital and an independent, community-based board collaboratively developed the Norwalk Community Health Center (the NCHC). The objectives of the affiliation were to (1) create a new, free-standing, high-quality community health center, (2) optimize grant and clinical revenue, (3) create an ideal venue for ambulatory care training for residents, and (4) replace the traditional and increasingly inefficient hospital-based primary care clinics. The hospital transferred all of its primary care clinical activity to the new community health center and provides an ongoing financial subsidy of the NCHC operations via a forgivable loan. In exchange, the NCHC granted Norwalk Hospital 24% of the seats on its board of directors and purchases all primary care provider services from the hospital. For adult medicine, the contract providers are exclusively Norwalk Hospital internal medicine residents and faculty. Contract charges are based not upon actual staffing but upon a standard formula relating full-time-equivalent providers to patient visits. The new 10,000 square-foot NCHC contains 2,500 square feet of additional integrated space, rented from the NCHC by Norwalk Hospital, which supports the residency education program. The NCHC opened in April 1999 and received FQHC status in November 1999. Adult medicine volume increased 30%, from 36.8 daily visits in the old hospital-based clinics to 48.0 at the NCHC. Resident and patient satisfaction are high. The NCHC now receives cost-based visit reimbursement from Medicaid and has received $1.8 million in state, federal, and local grants.
Aortic thrombus formation is rare in the patients with essential thrombocytosis (ET); therefore, no guidelines for its management have been established. Embolism from ET-associated large vessel thrombi is potentially lethal and has been managed surgically in a few reported cases. We describe herein a 45-year-old black woman with ET found to have a 3.5-cm, pedunculated intra-aortic thrombus at the thoracoabdominal junction. How to treat this potentially devastating aortic thrombus was a management dilemma. We believed, based on the patient's diagnosis of ET and the histology of similar thrombi in 1 reported series, that the aortic thrombus was a "white thrombus" consisting primarily of aggregated platelets with a minimal fibrin network and almost no entrapped erythrocytes. The patient was treated with aspirin, 325 mg daily, as a platelet antiaggregating agent and hydroxyurea, 1,500 mg daily, to reduce the platelet count to less than 450 x 10(9)/L. The thrombus resolved without severe thromboembolic events. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of a large intra-aortic thrombosis associated with ET that has been successfully managed with medical therapy alone.
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