House and Senate negotiators will meet in January to mesh their health bills after the Senate voted 60-39 Christmas Eve for a bill that aims to deliver on a Democratic goal of extending insurance coverage to nearly every American. Abortion policy, taxes, and a proposed government-run health-insurance plan are at the core of the coming struggle, the Wall Street Journal reports. But just about everyone in the health industry have provisions they want to keep, change, or scrap, the Journal reports.
Businesses are set to push for modifications to the Senate-approved health bill, while urging lawmakers to steer clear of the version passed by the House, the Wall Street Journal reports. The Senate bill has drawn tentative support from some large corporations and industry groups, despite containing a range of provisions that they hope to change. But businesses of all sizes oppose the House bill, which contains more-stringent requirements on employers to offer health coverage to employees.
Jason Boyd has been appointed interim chief executive of the Metro Nashville Hospital Authority. Boyd will assume the role on Feb. 1. Current CEO Dr. Reginald Coopwood recently told the authority's board that he plans to accept the chief executive post at Regional Medical Center in Memphis.
Massachusetts has approved plans by Weymouth-based South Shore Hospital to add two stories and 60 beds in a $52 million project that comes on the heels of construction of its $89 million cancer treatment center and new parking garage. The project was the only major hospital expansion approved by Massachusetts this fiscal year, the Boston Globe reports.
Although patients may not be aware of their presence, sales representatives have become fixtures in operating rooms across America, the Washington Post reports. As Washington tries to find new economies in healthcare, salesmen in the operating room serve as simple reminders that medicine is a business, with all the potential that entails to promote efficiency, boost sales, and extract profit. But the Post asks whether they should be there at all.
The most notable year in hospital medicine used to be 1996, when the phrase "hospitalist" was first coined in the New England Journal of Medicine. That is the year typically associated with the official birthday of hospital medicine.
Now, another landmark year has dawned. The year 2009 was a milestone for hospital medicine.
Hospitalists now have certification in hospital medicine from the American Board of Internal Medicine, as well as their own designation (Fellow of Hospital Medicine, or FHM, for short) from the Society of Hospital Medicine (SHM).
As the fastest growing medical specialty, hospital medicine includes a field of 30,000 practicing hospitalists in the country, according to SHM. With the newfound certification and designation, hospitalists are increasingly gaining professional recognition in the healthcare world.
Certification in hospital medicine
After years of whispers and held breaths, the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) and the American Board of Family Medicine (ABFM), under the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS), in October officially announced a five-year pilot program for focused practice in hospital medicine (FPHM) for general internists.
"This is not only a new kind of credential in hospital medicine, but it is a new kind of credential for the certifying board in that we are credentialing you not based on additional training, but rather based on what you have been doing for a living," said Robert M. Wachter, MD, professor and associate chair of the Department of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, and a member of the ABIM board of directors.
FPHM is considered maintenance of certification, rather than a separate certification. In the typical internal medicine maintenance of certification, which most hospitalists go through, physicians must complete a practice improvement module every 10 years. However, those pursuing the new FPHM must complete the more frequent standard of one in every three years. The FPHM criteria include ABFM- and ABIM-developed tools that are specifically targeted at hospitalist practice-based learning.
Just as airline pilots and teachers must recertify every couple of years, physicians might consider more frequent certification, according to Wachter. The new FPHM shows a continued competency and dedication in hospital medicine, he said.
ABIM vs. ABPS: Who's on first?
There's debate, however, on which organization was the first hospitalist certifying board. The American Board of Physician Specialties (ABPS) announced the newly established American Board of Hospital Medicine (ABHM) in January. The new ABHM generated debate among the hospitalist community about its validity as a certifying board, with e-mails and blogs filled with chats about what to expect.
A study in September concluded that the three major board certifying organizations—The ABMS, ABPS, and the American Osteopathic Association's Bureau of Osteopathic Specialists—require the same amount of certification and recertification requirements. The study, which was conducted by The Associated Industries of Florida Service Corporation, compared the three organizations' requirements by medical specialty, including years of required training, exams, documentation, and CME hours; it concluded the boards were essentially equal in the rigor of standards.
The new initials: FHM
In addition to the new options in certification, hospitalists now also can apply for some added letters on the nametag—FHM.
SHM announced the first class of Fellows of Hospital Medicine at its annual meeting in May. The 500-plus hospitalists with this honor are now adding FHM to their bios after MD or DO.
"Employers can look at this designation and know that a physician has special competencies, and it is important to physician colleagues because it demonstrates that we are committed to hospital medicine," says Shaun Frost, MD, FACP, FHM, regional medical director at Brentwood, TN–based Cogent Healthcare, member of the board of directors at SHM, and chair of the SHM membership committee that spearheaded the FHM process.
Just as the FHM designation is an added distinction, it also helps validate the specialty as a whole, according to Jeffrey Greenwald, MD, FHM, member of the hospital medicine unit at Boston Medical Center and associate professor of medicine at Boston University School of Medicine.
"I remember going to a lot of SHM meetings during my first five years as a hospitalist and thinking, ‘Gosh, when is the time going to come when we can stop defending who we are,'" said Greenwald. "In some ways, the FHM is that recognition that hospital medicine is here to stay."
What's to come in 2010?
Next year, SHM will announce the Senior Fellows of Hospital Medicine (SFHM) and Master's of Hospital Medicine (MHM) for nomination- and invitation-only members who have reached high leadership levels of experience.
In addition, applicable hospitalists can look forward to entering the ABIM pilot program in 2010, as well as look for the ongoing results of the FPHM programs.
Karen M. Cheung is an associate editor for HCPro, contributing writer for HealthLeaders Media, and blogger for HospitalistLeadership.com. She can be contacted at kcheung@hcpro.com. Liz Jones, associate editor of Medical Staff Briefing, contributed to this article. She can be contacted at ejones@hcpro.com.