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Hand Call Coverage at Busy Urban Trauma Centers
Dr. Andrew Berson aberson at agvscs.comSun Mar 9 18:08:24 GMT 2008
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Thank you so much for the helpful input. Andy -----Original Message----- From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org [mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of William Bromberg Sent: Friday, March 07, 2008 7:08 AM To: 'Trauma & Critical Care mailing list' Subject: Re: Hand Call Coverage at Busy Urban Trauma Centers Background on the site: Memorial Health University Med. Center, Savannah State Level I, ACS unverified (dropped when the neurosurgeons refused to publish a backup call schedule) 1300-1400 registry admits, 2200-2300 activations Our plastics and ortho hand trained/privileged individuals split hand call (about 1:5) they get paid a stipend (about $750/night I think). Prior to this we had a hand call schedule that all the ortho and plastics people were on without a stipend - it was a HUGE hassle to get someone to come in with a lot of pass the buck being played. No-one would do replants ("We're not a center!"). Now it's just a moderate hassle to get someone to come in. There's still some pass the buck (the plastics people don't have wrist privileges having been blocked years ago by the ortho guys so if there's a wrist injury they get passive aggressive and say to call ortho, etc. etc. etc.). Nobody will do replants. If you do give in and pay up make sure that there's a contract to define what "hand call" means. Bill >>> "Dr. Andrew Berson" <aberson at agvscs.com> 3/6/2008 4:45 PM >>> To list members: I'm looking for input from busy level I and II centers on how hand call coverage issues are being handled. Specifically, is this coverage provided by the ortho traumatologist or by a separate hand call list. The issue that we are dealing with is that after years of a very successful call roster for this subspecialty, we are running into a very untenable situation. In the past this coverage was provided by the ortho-traumatologists that had a robust elective hand surgery practice. These surgeons are already part of the paid call roster for orthopedics, and were providing hand "coverage" on nights where one of their non-hand surgery colleagues might be on call for general ortho trauma. Now, the hand surgeons are refusing to provide this coverage unless they are given an additional stipend. The general ortho-trauma physicians do not feel comfortable in caring for significant hand issues, since this is not part of their elective practice. The question is, should a board certified orthopedic surgeon, on a paid trauma call list at a busy level II trauma center be capable of evaluating an injured hand and at least providing initial management of the injury, until their "hand surgery" partner is available the next day, or are we forced to give into the demands of the hand specialists and provide another stipend position on the call roster. (It should be mentioned that the amount being requested outpaces the stipend paid to the IN HOUSE Trauma/Acute Care surgeon, even thought hand call is a home based call which does not receive many true emergencies). Please give any constructive feedback. I would also be interested to know how many list members are seeing similar issues with their hand call rosters. Thank you in advance. Andrew J. Berson, M.D. Assist. Trauma Director Memorial Health System, Colorado Springs, CO -- 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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