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Building a Career in Pediatric Hospital Medicine

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Title: Building a Career in Pediatric Hospital Medicine


1
Building a Career in Pediatric Hospital Medicine
  • Jennifer Daru, MD, FAAP
  • September 11, 2008

2
(No Transcript)
3
Disclosure
  • I have no disclosures.

4
Objectives
  • To examine what a career in pediatric hospital
    medicine (PHM) might be like
  • To understand why you should or shouldn't pursue
    a fellowship in PHM
  • To appreciate what skill sets are required to be
    a successful hospitalist
  • Darus Goal To give you a sense of the field,
    where its going, the language involved and how
    you can contribute to it as you progress through
    your career

5
  • The general pediatrician who specializes in
    inpatient practice rides the wave of the future.
  • Menna VJ. Inpatient Care The General
    Pediatricians Future. Pediatr in Rev
    199012(6)165-6

6
Resident Interest in PHM Increasing
Daru, JA et al, Pediatric Hospital Medicine as a
Career Trainee Perspective, PAS 2008
7
Career Wanted Pediatric Hospitalist
  • Do you like pediatric inpatient medicine?
  • Not interested in doing another three years of
    training?
  • Join us! (P.S. We have got lots of jobs, youll
    be paid by a hospital, your malpractice will be
    covered and you can do shift work!)
  • P.P.S. Youll have to cover nights, weekends and
    holidays and respond to hospital administrators

8
Hospital Medicine Past,Present and Your Future
9
Hospitalists History and Definition
  • 1996 Wachter coins term Hospitalist
  • Physicians who spend at least 25 of their time
    serving as the physician of record for
    hospitalized patients who have been referred by
    primary care physicians and who are referred back
    to their primary care physicians at the time of
    discharge (Wachter, 1997)
  • 1998 National Association of Inpatient
    Physicians holds first meeting (now the Society
    of Hospital Medicine)
  • 2003 The tri-sponsored conference is born San
    Antonio, Texas

10
History (continued)
  • 2003 AAP Section on Hospital Care (now Hospital
    Medicine) Produces paper Guiding Principles of
    Pediatric Hospitalist Programs
  • 2003 First textbook comes out
  • 2005 Added to the dictionary
  • 2006 The Journal of Hospital Medicine
  • 2007 Ambulatory Pediatric Association becomes
    Academic Pediatric Association another textbook
  • 2007 The first news journal for Pediatric
    Hospital Medicine is born Hospital Pediatrics

11
Define yourself or be defined
  • A hospitalist is a physician who specializes in
    treating hospitalized patients of other
    physicians in order to minimize the number of
    hospital visits by other physicians.
  • (Miriam Webster 2005)
  • Physicians whose primary professional focus is
    the general medical care of hospitalized
    patients. Their activities include patient care,
    teaching, research, and leadership related to
    hospital medicine.
  • (SHM)

12
Understand Hospitalist Mandates
13
Your Personal Job Mandates
  • Full-time vs. Part-time
  • Academic vs. Non-Academic
  • Purely clinical vs. Clinical Administrative
  • Career-building Career-evolving vs. Career
    (Income) maintenance

Thanks to Doug Carlson
14
Your Personal Life Mandates
  • Commitments to
  • Yourself (health, sleep, love)
  • Family
  • Friends
  • Fun

15
Take Your Mandates andFind Some Mentorship
16
Top 10 Qualities of a Good Mentor
  • 1. Willingness to share skills, knowledge, and
    expertise
  • 2. Demonstrates a positive attitude and acts as
    a role model
  • 3. Takes personal interest in the mentoring
    relationship
  • 4. Exhibits enthusiasm in the field
  • 5. Values ongoing learning and growth in the
    field

http//internships.about.com/od/internships101/tp/
MentQualities.htm Accessed9/7/08
17
Top 10 Qualities of a Good Mentor
  • 6. Provides guidance and constructive feedback
  • 7. Respected by colleagues and employees in all
    levels of the organization
  • 8. Sets and meets ongoing personal and
    professional goals
  • 9. Values the opinions and initiatives of others
  • 10. Motivates others by setting a good example

http//internships.about.com/od/internships101/tp/
MentQualities.htm Accessed9/7/08
18
How to Find a Mentor
  • Invite someone to lunch
  • Known person
  • Unknown person
  • AAP SOHM developing individual mentorship list
  • Or use the AAP Listserv
  • Network at Conference

19
Discussion Topics with Mentor
  • Where do you want to work and what kind of job
    do you want?
  • Rural vs. Suburban vs. Urban
  • Community vs. academic
  • Advantages and Disadvantages of fellowship
  • Explore any opportunities carefully
  • Call me (or others) to discuss

20
Location and Your Vocation
21
Smaller/Rural/Community Hospitals
  • In general more ED or NICU based work
  • Pediatric pts
  • The ward may struggle to maintain a census
  • Your role front-line diagnostician, specialist
    replacement, child advocate and educator
  • Rapid Career advancement (CHAIR?) possible

22
Large / Academic Centers
  • You are a smaller player in a big machine
  • Specialists support patients along with you
  • More complex patients, but buck doesnt stop with
    you
  • Opportunities for mentorship are increased
  • You may participate in education of others
  • Over time, hospitalists are playing larger
    administrative roles
  • VPMA, CMO, Chair, Chief Quality Officer

23
Is FellowshipRight For You?
  • Know the options and goals

24
Why Fellowships Exist
  • AAP says
  • Goal of subspecialty training is to advance the
    health of children by preparing graduates who are
    competent in clinical care, education, and
    research
  • Academic Hospitalist Leaders feel
  • Research is the key to driving the field of
    Hospital Medicine forward

25
Learning Comes in Many Forms How Residents Want
to be Trained
Daru, JA et al, Pediatric Hospital Medicine as a
Career Trainee Perspective, PAS 2008
26
Considering a Fellowship
27
Pro-Fellowship Points
  • Trains Physicians for Careers in Academia and
    beyond
  • Will learn how to perform research and contribute
    to developing field of medicine that sorely needs
    it
  • Clinical Advancement
  • Participate in Medical Education
  • Currently a Two Year commitment
  • Specialty Boards coming soon? Then its 3!
  • May also allow for Public Health Degree or MBA

Thanks to Rana Kronfol
28
Fellowship List
  • Children's Specialists San Diego (affiliated with
    UCSD)
  • National Medical Center (Washington, DC)
  • Baylor College of Medicine (affiliated withTexas
    Children's Hospital, Houston)
  • Children's Hospital at Boston (affiliated with
    Harvard)
  • University of South Florida
  • Emory
  • Sick Kids in Toronto
  • Your local hospital?

29
Con-Fellowship Points
  • Residency training should be good enough to get
    you going
  • Jobs too diverse for fellowship to prepare you
    appropriately
  • Not everyone should or wants to do research
  • Loan Deferment is too expensive
  • Fellowship may not increase your take home

Thanks to David Rappaport
30
The Future of the Field
31
Board Certification vs. Recognition of Focused
Practice
  • Defining a Subspecialty (Board-certified)
  • Constitutes a body of knowledge or technique
    beyond that of the broad discipline
  • Requires additional training and directly
    supervised performance of procedures /
    application of specific practice methods by
    experts in the field.
  • Involves applying medicine AND
    specialized knowledge and procedures to a subset
    of patients.

(American Board of Internal Medicine Website)
http//www.abim.org/news/news/hospital-medicine-q
a.aspx
32
Recognition of Focused Practice Favored in
Internal Medicine
  • In contrast, hospital medicine is the practice of
    medicine for patients during
    hospitalization.
  • Thus, the exploration of a Recognition of Focused
    Practice
  • Received after practicing for some time, passing
    a test, etc.
  • Pediatric Hospital Medicine likely to follow
    adult lead

(American Board of Internal Medicine Website)
http//www.abim.org/news/news/hospital-medicine-q
a.aspx
33
Your Future Your Job
34
Resources for a Job as a Hospitalist
  • Your friendly neighborhood Hospitalist
  • Call hospitals, ask for hospitalist or
    director/chair
  • Jennifer Daru - daruj_at_sutterhealth.org
  • AAP SOHM website
  • Winter 2006 Publication PHM Career Wanted
  • Pediatric Hospitalist Program of North America
    Database
  • Join Listserv
  • SHM website
  • A White Paper on Hospitalist Career Satisfaction.
    SHM Career Satisfaction Task Force, December, 2006

35
Selecting a Job
  • Step 1 What areas does the team cover and what
    skill sets are expected vs. mentored?
  • What does the job expect of you?
  • Step 2 Is the job structured to make it
    sustainable for the long term?
  • What do you expect of the job?

36
Questions to Ask
  • What is the goal of the Hospitalist team?
  • How is the job structured?
  • How long has the program been in place?
  • What skills sets am I expected to have?
  • How will I be mentored in these skill sets?
  • How are schedules done (seniority, equality)?
  • How does the organization support my personal
    goals (vacation, family, travel, volunteerism)?

37
More Questions to Consider
  • How do you support advancement of my career?
  • What reward systems does the team have in place?
    (salary strategy, incentives)
  • What is the relationship between administration
    and the program?
  • What is the relationship between local doctors
    and the program?
  • What is the age distribution of physicians on the
    team?
  • What happens when the team is short staffed?
  • Can I see the call room?

38
Hospitalists Participate in Many Areas of Care
39
Neonatal Critical Care Hospitalists Bring Needed
Skills
  • Umbilical catheterization
  • Endotracheal intubation
  • Arterial and venous blood draws
  • Percutaneous and central line placement
  • Lumbar puncture
  • Thoracentesis
  • Exchange transfusion
  • Suprapubic tap

Carlson D et al. Pediatric Hospitalists filled
varied roles in the care of newborns. Pediatric
Annals. 200332(12) 802-810.
40
Pediatric Critical Care Hospitalists Bring
Needed Skills
  • Bag-valve-mask ventilation
  • Endotracheal intubation
  • Femoral venous line placement
  • PICC line placement
  • Thoracentesis
  • Thoracostomy tube placement
  • Joint Aspiration
  • Arterial line placement
  • Paracentesis
  • Intraosseous placement

Swift, J. Integrating Hospitalists into the
Pediatric Intensive Care Unit. Pediatric Annals.
2003 32(12)813-816.
41
Ward Patient Care Hospitalists Bring Needed
Skills
  • PALS certification and associated skill sets
  • NRP certification and associated skill sets
  • Chest tube placement
  • Intravenous line placement
  • Lumbar puncture
  • Suprapubic tap
  • Urinary catheterization
  • Venous and arterial blood draw

From Gill J, Daru JA. Community Pediatricians
Collaborate with Hospitalists to Build a better
Ward Service. Pediatric Annals. 2003
32(3)791-796.
42
Benefits Hospitalists Bring
  • Achievement of Quality Measures
  • Asthma
  • Pediatric Rapid Response Teams
  • Increase in patient safety
  • Increase in patient satisfaction
  • Increase in primary care provider satisfaction
  • Added knowledge and experience to inpatient
    scenarios

43
Good Characteristics for a Hospitalist
  • Able to lead a team of caregivers
  • Able to get the job done under pressure
  • Pressure may be a difficult situation or a busy
    day
  • Knows where to go for help
  • During a code, diagnostic dilemma or career
    crisis
  • Politically savvy
  • Has a flexible family
  • You may be home after school, but gone at night

44
Avoid the Pitfalls
  • Assess program for longevity
  • Assess job structure for the support you need
  • Avoid burnout

45
Resident Perception of Longevity of Pediatric
Hospital Medicine Positions
Unsure 4
Long-term Career 26
Either Long-term or Short-term 49
Short-term Opportunity 21
Daru, JA et al, Resident Exposure to and
Perception of Pediatric Hospital Medicine, PAS
2008
46
Framework for Career Satisfaction
A White Paper on Hospitalist Career Satisfaction.
SHM Career Satisfaction Task Force, December, 2006
47
Job Fit
  • Task Control control over when, how, and how
    quickly a task is done
  • Decision/Organizational Control control over
    task assignment and policies
  • Physical Environment Control control over the
    location, layout, and climate of where work is
    done
  • Resource Control control over the availability
    of support staff, supplies, and materials

A White Paper on Hospitalist Career Satisfaction.
SHM Career Satisfaction Task Force, December, 2006
48
Avoiding Burnout
  • 1970 Maslach and Jackson invent construct of
    burnout
  • Emotional exhaustion
  • Depersonalization
  • Reduced sense of personal accomplishment
  • Hospitalists at high risk

49
Growing Your Practice and Your Success
  • Find where you fit in,
  • Contribute to the field,
  • Record everything!

50
Get Basics Down, Know Goals
  • Build your skill sets as a diagnostician and a
    proceduralist and then go beyond this
  • Build a practice you will be proud of when you
    retire
  • Decide where you want to go
  • Happy where you are
  • Want to become part of leadership locally or
    nationally
  • Want to become part of administration
  • Develop a Specialty (quality, abuse, pain)

51
Want Advancement?
  • Build Your CV/Portfolio
  • Publish, Publish, Publish
  • Get involved nationally
  • Opportunities abound
  • Consider an additional degree
  • MBA, MPH

52
Promotion Portfolio
  • If you dont document it, youre not doing it
  • Try to develop a theme or focus
  • More than just publications and grants
  • Clinical Contributions
  • Educational Contributions
  • Community Service Contributions
  • Research Contributions (grants, scientific
    publications)
  • References

With Thanks to Liza Zaoutis, Pediatric Hospital
Medicine Conference 2008
53
Clinical Contributions
  • Direct or supervisory patient care (service)
  • Quantity shifts, weeks, blocks, months
  • Busy-ness e.g., encounters/day
  • Call in-hospital or from home
  • Procedures
  • New clinical programs that youve developed
  • Clinical administrative responsibilities
  • e.g., clinical director of area or program
  • e.g., NP supervisor
  • Participation in clinical trials

With Thanks to Liza Zaoutis, Pediatric Hospital
Medicine Conference 2008
54
Clinical Contributions (contd)
  • Clinical pathways or guidelines that youve
    developed or implemented
  • Quality initiatives
  • Member or leader
  • Committee, working group, task force
  • New policy or procedures
  • Other innovations (e.g., new sign-out system,
    new rounding method, new communication
    techniques, billing updates)

With Thanks to Liza Zaoutis, Pediatric Hospital
Medicine Conference 2008
55
Clinical Contributions (contd)
  • Feedback you give
  • To med students
  • To residents/fellows
  • To NPs or other staff
  • Feedback you get
  • From staff
  • From trainees
  • From families

With Thanks to Liza Zaoutis, Pediatric Hospital
Medicine Conference 2008
56
Educational Contributions
  • Didactic teaching session
  • Everyone, every time
  • Intra-institutional, regional, national,
    international
  • Keep evaluations (if theyre good)
  • Curriculum development (e.g., rotations,
    electives)
  • New handouts, syllabi, reading lists
  • Simulation models (e.g., mock codes)
  • Assessment tool development (e.g., exam
    questions, OSCE)

With Thanks to Liza Zaoutis, Pediatric Hospital
Medicine Conference 2008
57
Educational Contributions (contd)
  • Mentorship
  • Development of CME courses, workshops
  • Education-related publications
  • Case reports
  • Book chapters
  • Abstracts, articles
  • Teaching awards

With Thanks to Liza Zaoutis, Pediatric Hospital
Medicine Conference 2008
58
Community Service Contributions
  • Institutional committees/activities
  • Division, Department
  • Hospital
  • School of Medicine, University
  • Extra-institutional committees/activities
  • Local, regional, national
  • Media (newspaper, radio, TV, website)

With Thanks to Liza Zaoutis, Pediatric Hospital
Medicine Conference 2008
59
References
  • Those you have taught
  • Students (medical, nursing, etc)
  • Residents, fellows
  • Peers (CME, other colleagues)
  • Colleagues
  • Supervisors
  • Administrators, nonclinical collaborators
  • Patients and families
  • Extramural consultants

With Thanks to Liza Zaoutis, Pediatric Hospital
Medicine Conference 2008
60
Other Insider tips for Success
  • Be able to describe what a Hospitalist is and
    know the name of your field (Hospital Medicine)
  • Remember that you represent the hospital in all
    of your interactions as a physician
  • Know this
  • Do Hospitalists make their salaries?
  • Keep an eye on the future of the field

61
Know the Future of PHM
  • Expanding Patient Care Realms
  • Medically Complex Kids
  • Transport
  • Sedation
  • Quality Improvement
  • Practice guidelines
  • Outcomes research
  • Board Certification/Recognition of Focused
    Practice
  • Similar to Intensivists, ED?
  • Mentorship

62
At the end of the day
  • Be happy in your life
  • Your job is one piece of this
  • Build career you will be proud of when you retire
  • This means building a pediatric hospital program
    that contributes to its community (large or
    small) by providing the care children need in a
    safe, family-focused environment regardless of
    resources available but in a sustainable way.

63
Thank You!
  • Jennifer Daru, MD, FAAP
  • Chief, Division of Pediatric Hospital Medicine
  • California Pacific Medical Center
  • daruj_at_sutterhealth.org
  • 415-600-0758
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