Login
Site Search
Trauma-List Subscription

Subscribe

Would you like to receive list emails batched into one daily digest?
No Yes
Modify Your Subscription

Modify

Home > List Archives

Backup Call Pay

McSwain, Norman E Jr. nmcswai at tulane.edu
Mon Sep 14 16:02:05 BST 2009


Consider the following in your deliberations. When you are taking
in-house trauma call, this is work in addition to those who are surgeons
and currently do not stay in house every few night away from family and
friends. It is additional work

Most physicians who do 'fee for service' get paid when they operate
after hours. Most trauma surgeons do this work for free and never get
paid. Should there not be compensation for extra work.

Salaried surgeons should have in their job description if in-house call
is required or not and how often they are expected to come in after
hours. That way the surgeon will know up front what is expected of
him/her. One day, the US surgeons will be forced to adhere to the 80
hour work week, as is required of the residents. Many physicians outside
of the US already have hour limitations and do this already but with
different hour requirement. Should surgeons, who are required to take
in-house call, be paid an additional salary for staying in house vs a
dermatologist ( as an example) who would never expect to work after
hours?

The discussion should separate 1)In-house call, 2) at home call but
most of the call nights come in at least once or twice, and 3) at home
call and come in only 1 ever month or so.

Norman
 
Norman McSwain MD
Professor, Tulane School of Medicine
Trauma Director, Charity Hospital Trauma Center
norman.mcswain at tulane.edu
504 988 5111

-----Original Message-----
From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org
[mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of Bjorn, Pret
Sent: Monday, September 14, 2009 9:29 AM
To: Trauma-List [TRAUMA.ORG]
Subject: RE: Backup Call Pay

Bravo on both accounts.

Paying a stipend on top of privileges sets a crippling precedent.  You
can't un-push that domino, and your trauma center will suffer for it.

And as for shotgun diagnostics (although I missed the origin of this
tangent), there should be dedicated instruction in all critical care
curricula with regard to timing and yield of various labs and imaging.  

We are inclined to blame "defensive medicine," but I suspect that at
least part of the problem is intellectual laziness: ("Don't think!  Run
tests!")

Pret Bjorn, RN
Bangor, ME USA



-----Original Message-----
From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org
[mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of Gross, Ronald
Sent: Monday, September 14, 2009 8:40 AM
To: 'Trauma-List [TRAUMA.ORG]'
Subject: RE: Backup Call Pay

I DO NOT agree with call pay for any physician.  We all have hospital
PRIVILEGES, and with those privileges come OBLIGATIONS. IMHO, taking
call is just one of the obligations that should be pay-back for the
privileges.  Teaching our up-coming colleagues that every test ordered
by them should (1) be reviewed/examined by them personally, and (2)
should be ordered knowing that the results WILL affect subsequent
management is just another obligation that we seem to have forgotten
about.

OK, I will shut up now and yield my soap box to Dr. Mattox!

Ron


--
trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG
To change your settings or unsubscribe visit:
http://www.trauma.org/index.php?/community/


More information about the trauma-list mailing list