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Ideal length of stay in the ED
Ronald Gross Rgross at harthosp.orgMon Oct 15 17:09:23 BST 2007
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Oh yeah - I forgot the places where there are no residents. I guess the doc who gets the consult might actually have to do the same thing that I was thinking the residents should do. And as a guy who still takes in-house call (at this point 7-10 nights a month), I think I have every right to think that all of my colleagues fortunate enough to actually go home on their nights on call would see the patients just as I do. If they don't want to come in to do that, well, they always have that in-house call option........... I don't know what the heck I ate this morning, but it appears that I am full of piss and vineger today. DUCK!!! >>> "Ronald Gross" <Rgross at harthosp.org> 10/15/2007 12:01 PM >>> WAIT!!! I have a novel concept! Never been done before! Are y'all ready???? Why don't we teach the residents to come to the ED, take a history, do a physical examination, and admit the patient based on all of that?? I think that really beats "Call me when the CT is done", and my guess is that the patient would be moved out of the ED and on to the floor about 4 to 5 hours sooner. WOW. I think I am on to something novel. We might want to do a study or something........ Y'know, sometimes I really crack myself up! My best to all, Ron >>> <Krin135 at aol.com> 10/15/2007 11:52 AM >>> In a message dated 14-Oct-07 10:35:16 Central Daylight Time, KMATTOX at aol.com writes: In a message dated 10/14/2007 9:57:26 A.M. Central Daylight Time, andrewj.bowman at gmail.com writes: What then do we do about the attendings (fill in specialty here) who are reluctant to admit a patient without the complete workup???? Create a hospital policy that allows, encourages, mandates that the EC staff have the authority, and supported by the Medical Executive Committee to admit a patient to any hospital in-service where the service is slow to evaluate the patient or require that an entire work up occur there prior to going to an in house bed. k I'd love it...now just need to convince the med exec committee (and the hospitalists) that the hospitalists and attendings don't need every jot and tittle done in the ED prior to admission.... and convince some of the residents at major teaching hospitals that they can finish the work up faster after they have the patient in their hands than the smaller hospitals can do prior to transfer... ck Charles S. Krin, DO FAAFP ************************************** See what's new at http://www.aol.com -- trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: http://www.trauma.org/index.php?/community/ -- trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: http://www.trauma.org/index.php?/community/
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