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2009 NCSC
Delegates Focus on FPs as ER Physicians, Mothers and Infants as Family Unit, IMGs, Health IT
By David Mitchell • Kansas City, Mo.
Emergency Medicine and FPs
Yu said FPs face privileging issues, insurance hassles and pay disparities in ER settings. She said a board-certified emergency physician, or EP, can make as much as $100 an hour more than a board-certified family physician for the same job in the same ER.
"It doesn't seem right, does it?" she asked.
Yu testified to the reference committee that 43 percent of the nearly 40,000 physicians now working in ERs are not board-certified in emergency medicine.
"Most of those people will be family physicians," she said after the committee hearing. "Many of those (physicians) started working in the emergency room in 1999 or prior to 1999, when the stringent requirements for working in emergency rooms were not as difficult."
According to Yu, many of those "legacy physicians" will be retiring in the near future, creating a huge shortage.
Maintaining the Family Unit
According to Laura Martin, D.O., a women's constituency representative from Fayetteville, N.Y., and co-author of the proposal, if either mother or infant experiences health problems in the immediate postpartum period, the two can end up in two different hospitals in two different cities.
Martin told AAFP News Now in an interview after the hearing that she experienced the problem as a mother and patient when her son was transferred to another facility after birth because of a collapsed lung.
"He was sent two hours away to another hospital," she said, "and I saw him three days later."
Martin said the practice doesn't make sense because studies have shown that newborns feed and gain weight better, sleep better, and respond better to treatment when kept with their mothers.
"What we'd like to have happen is that some dialogue starts happening with these insurers, (who) really are the people (who) are stopping these transfers," she said. "We'd like to lump the payments together and somehow develop a fee schedule that allows for (mothers and infants) to be treated together."
International Medical Graduates
Faozan Narvel, M.D., of Dublin, Ohio, co-convener of the IMG caucus, testified during the reference committee hearing that nearly 50 percent of residents placed in family medicine programs through the National Resident Matching Program this year were IMGs. He added in a subsequent interview with AAFP News Now that this figure tops the 34 percent seen in 2008. He also said IMGs account for 17 percent of the AAFP's active membership.
"We want them to prefer and choose family medicine when they apply for a residency program in the United States," he said. "I think the reality is sinking in that international medical graduates will play a very major role in the future of family medicine."
Narvel testified that many countries don't have a family medicine specialty. Instead, these countries have general practice programs that do not allow doctors to deliver babies or work in hospitals. This can be confusing for IMGs.
"(FPs) provide everything possible for the patient so they don't need to go to 10 different doctors to seek care," Narvel said. "This aspect isn't known to most international medical graduates when they are graduating from medical schools. Once they realize that the real doctors in the world are family doctors, they'll automatically choose family medicine as their career."
Health IT and EHRs
- a proposal that the AAFP investigate evidence of the efficiencies of EHRs and communicate that information to the public;
- a proposal that the Academy educate members on the importance of using patient registries and provide a list of EHR features that support patient registries, medical home concepts and National Committee for Quality Assurance medical home recognition;
- a proposal that the AAFP support the position of primary care providers as partners in the design, organization and development of personal health records, as well as support the interface of EHRs and personal health records so patient information is made available to primary care providers; and
- a proposal that the AAFP educate its members about the benefits of telemedicine and advocate for expansion of telemedicine services.
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