Is there a hospitalist in the house?

ThoelkeIn today’s era of managed care, most physicians have fewer inpatients, and that makes it hard for many to justify spending time at the hospital with those patients. Mark S. Thoelke, M.D., clinical director of the hospitalist service at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and assistant professor of medicine at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, says because hospitalist physicians do not maintain outpatient practices, they can spend all of their time in the hospital and are available to treat a wide range of patients. That also allows for improvements in outpatient care because with their inpatients cared for by hospitalists, primary care physicians can focus even more of their time on the needs of the outpatients who make up the vast majority of their practices.

Of note

Henry Roediger, Ph.D., Janice M. Huss, Ph.D., Kevin D. Moeller, Ph.D., Glenn D. Stone, Ph.D., Karen L. Wooley, Ph.D., Brian N. Finck, Ph.D., Amy V. Walker, Ph.D., Tzyh-Jong Tarn, D.Sc., Muthayyah Srinivasan, Bruce Fegley, Ph.D., Jonathan B. Losos, Ph.D., Tamara Hershey, Ph.D., Michael Sherraden, Ph.D., Gabriel Alejandro de Erausquin, M.D., Ph.D., Glenn C. Conroy, Ph.D., Carlos F. Suarez, M.D., Rebecca Treiman, Ph.D., Jeffrey M. Zacks, Ph.D., Lawrence M. Lewis, M.D., and J. William Harbour, M.D.,
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