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Hospitalist Recruitment and Retention – Building a Hospital Medicine Program

Software / Digital Media
224 Seiten
2009
Wiley-Blackwell (Hersteller)
978-0-470-56826-2 (ISBN)
CHF 136,95 inkl. MwSt
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The first comprehensive treatment of hospitalist recruitment and retention, this resource discusses how to build a new hospital medicine practice and effectively reinvigorate and maintain an established practice. The coverage thoroughly analyzes current trends in hospital medicine, and discusses the role of the hospitalist in recruitment, retention, and stabilization of physicians in their local communities. The text also offers professional tools developed over years of clinical practice and professional consultation with more than two dozen hospital medicine programs. Given the impending shortage of physicians in the healthcare industry, this text is especially timely.

KENNETH G. SIMONE, DO, FHM, is a board-certified family physician, Fellow of Hospital Medicine, and the founder and President of Hospitalist and Practice Solutions, a consulting company that develops, restructures, and redesigns hospitalist programs. Dr. Simone founded the first hospitalist program in Maine and served as its administrative director for ten years. In addition, he has developed and rebuilt numerous hospitalist programs nationwide. He is currently Chair of the Society of Hospital Medicine's Chapter Support Committee and a board member of the University of New England.

Preface. 1 Physician Supply and Demand. 1.1 The Aging Medical Workforce. 1.2 The Growing and Aging Population. 1.3 Decreased Medical School Matriculation. 1.4 The Changing Demographics of Medicine. 1.5 The Cost of Medical School and the Graduate Debt Burden. 1.6 The Changing Role of the Specialist. 1.7 The Changing Scope of Primary Care. 1.8 The Availability and Accessibility of Training Programs. 1.9 Technological Advances. 1.10 The Increasing Regulatory Responsibilities Placed on Physicians. 1.11 Rising Practice Expenses and Diminishing Returns from the Insurance Industry. 1.12 Utilization of Nonphysician Clinicians. 1.13 Government Policy. 1.14 Generational Expectations. 2 The Hospitalist Marketplace. 2.1 Age, Gender, and Years Employed as a Hospitalist. 2.2 Hospitalist Education. 2.3 Hospitalist Practice Location. 2.4 Hospitalist Employment Model and Hospital Teaching Status. 2.5 Control/Hospital Governance of Affiliated Hospital. 2.6 Hospital Size. 2.7 Hospitalist Staffing. 2.8 Coverage Schedule and Night Call Responsibility. 2.9 Hospitalist Program Growth and Turnover. 3 The Role of the Hospitalist. 3.1 Hospitalist Program Patient Type and Encounter Type. 3.2 Hospitalist Time Spent on Nonclinical Activities. 3.3 Leader Time Spent on Administrative Activities. 3.4 Hospitalist Activities Based on Location. 4 The Hospitalist Recruitment Pool. 4.1 Building Your Recruitment Network. 4.2 Identifying Your Candidate Pool. 5 Challenges Recruiting Hospitalists. 5.1 Physician Compensation. 5.2 Practice Model. 5.3 Work and Call Schedule. 5.4 Daily Workload. 5.5 Added-Value Benefits. 5.6 Medical Staff Support. 5.7 Hospital Culture and Systems. 5.8 Technology. 5.9 Specialty Providers. 5.10 Referral Network. 5.11 Hospital Administrative Support. 5.12 Staff Stability. 5.13 Community and Practice Culture. 6 Incentive Plans. 6.1 Incentive Plan Objectives. 6.2 Data Systems. 6.3 Metrics. 6.4 Benchmarking. 6.5 Incentive Payout. 7 National Recruitment Initiatives. 7.1 Trend in Hospitalist Salary. 7.2 Type of Incentives Offered for All Specialties. 7.3 Relocation Pay, and Amount, for All Specialties. 7.4 Signing Bonus, and Amount, for All Specialties. 7.5 Amount of CME for All Specialties. 7.6 Additional Benefits. 7.7 Hospital-Employed Job Opportunities. 7.8 Assessment of Fair Market Value and Physician Compensation. 8 Retention Initiatives. 8.1 Defining Expectations and Finding the Appropriate Fit. 8.2 Work-Life Balance. 8.3 Integration of the Hospitalist Program and Hospitalist Physicians. 8.4 Support from the Clinical Director and Sponsoring Hospital. 8.5 Clinical and Operational Support. 8.6 Opportunities for Career Growth and Advancement. 8.7 Financial Opportunities. 8.8 Spousal/Significant Other and Family Integration Within the Community. 8.9 The Orientation Program. 8.10 The Exit Interview. 9 Putting It All Together: The Site Visit and Interview. 9.1 The Contact. 9.2 The Site Visit. 9.3 The Recruitment Team. 9.4 Discussion Topics. 9.5 The Interview. 9.6 The Postvisit Phase. 9.7 Hiring Protocol. 10 The Contract. 10.1 Employment Arrangement. 10.2 Qualifications. 10.3 Standards of Service. 10.4 Physician Services. 10.5 Duties and Responsibilities of the Employer. 10.6 The Term of Employment. 10.7 Hours of Employment. 10.8 Compensation. 10.9 Professional Liability. 10.10 Employment Activities Outside the Practice. 10.11 Restrictive Covenants. 10.12 Termination of Employment. 10.13 Patient Record Ownership. 10.14 Confidentiality. 10.15 Financial Relationship Between Employer and Physician. 11 Practice Management Strategies. 11.1 The Hospitalist Budget. 11.2 Hospitalist Staffing. 11.3 Program Policies and Procedures. 11.4 Practice Support. 11.5 Strategic Planning. 11.6 Collaborative Systems of Care. 11.7 Marketing the Program. 12 Targeting Program Leadership. 12.1 Attributes of Effective Program Leadership. 12.2 Mentoring Potential Leaders. 12.3 Leadership Versus Management. 12.4 Identifying and Recruiting an Effective Leader. 12.5 Practice Culture and Career Satisfaction. 13 Concluding Thoughts. References. Index.

Erscheint lt. Verlag 15.12.2009
Verlagsort Hoboken
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Medizin / Pharmazie Gesundheitswesen
Medizin / Pharmazie Medizinische Fachgebiete
Wirtschaft Betriebswirtschaft / Management Personalwesen
ISBN-10 0-470-56826-7 / 0470568267
ISBN-13 978-0-470-56826-2 / 9780470568262
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
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