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Oncology hospitalist field is small, but growing


 

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Dr. Chen, who is trained as an oncologist, said hospitalists don’t need to be oncologists to do this job. But as the field develops, there are likely to be some training or prerequisites that will develop. For now, Dr. Chen said hospitalists need to have an interest in treating complex patients and be willing to develop a deeper understanding of the principles of cancer medicine.

"We are now at a point in the road of this endeavor where best practices, and understanding these issues, can be further defined," Dr. Chen said.

As Dr. Chen proves, oncology hospitalists can be oncologists or traditional hospitalists trained in internal medicine or family medicine. But they must all be prepared to handle complex patients and take on end-of-life discussions.

Dr. Barbara C. Egan

At Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, where the oncology-hospitalist team works mainly with GI oncology and lymphoma patients, they treat patients with very advanced disease, many of whom are in the last 6 months of life.

"We’ve attained a lot of experience and expertise in end-of-life care, but it’s all been on-the-job training," said Dr. Barbara C. Egan, chief of the hospital medicine service at Sloan-Kettering.

Because of the heavy focus on end-of-life care, Dr. Egan and some of the other hospitalists in her group were recently board certified in hospice and palliative medicine based in part on their clinical experience working with cancer patients.

Emotional days

The work is very different from a general medicine hospitalist service. For oncology hospitalists, all of the patients have multisystem organ disease and also typically have complicated psychosocial dynamics end-of-life care. The result is a time-consuming, emotionally charged day that isn’t accurately measured by RVUs (relative value units) or the number of encounters per day, Dr. Egan said.

"It’s very different to round on a 25-year-old who’s dying of colon cancer, than in a general medicine hospital where you might have several patients on the service who are there for single issue, uncomplicated soft rule-out MI." she said. "It’s definitely very emotionally draining on the physicians."

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