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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A nocturnist is a hospital-based hospitalist (see hospital medicine) who only works overnight. Most nocturnists are trained in internal medicine or family medicine.[1] However, there are nocturnists trained in other specialties, such as pediatrics. The main role of a nocturnist is to admit patients into the hospital from an emergency department, and to care for previously admitted inpatients through the night.[2] Nocturnists differ from on-call doctors in that they work exclusively at night, rather than being on-call and also working daytime shifts.[3] As of 2020, about half of teaching hospitals in the United States staff nocturnists,[1] and a 2018 study reporting 76.1% of adults-only hospitals, 27.6% of children-only hospitals, and 68.2% of combined hospitals had nocturnists.[4]: 4 

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Effectiveness

A 2015 study helped to characterize the impact of nocturnist. Compared with before implementation, there was no difference in mortality, 30-day readmissions, mean length of stay, or upgrades to intensive care with the addition of these overnight hospitalists.[5] Similar results were reproduced in a 2018-19 Canadian study, that nocturnists being present did not affect patient outcomes.

In a 2020 survey of 20,744 internal medicine residents, it was found that more residents reported receiving adequate supervision when nocturnists were present, although the reported percentage was rather low, with the authors speculating this is due to the variable implementations of nocturnist occupations.[6]

Salary

According to a 2011 survey, the average salary for a nocturnist was 2.5% lower than other hospitalists, and the survey results report nocturnists were 27% less productive than other day-time physician roles as measured by work relative value units.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b Dunbar-Yaffe, Richard; Wu, Robert C.; Oza, Amit; Lee-Kim, Victoria; Cram, Peter (April 2021). "Impact of an internal medicine nocturnist service on care of patients with cancer at a large Canadian teaching hospital: a quality-improvement study". CMAJ Open. 9 (2): E667–E672. doi:10.9778/cmajo.20200167. ISSN 2291-0026. PMC 8248558.
  2. ^ Sabharwal, Aman (June 2005). "Life as a Nocturnist" (PDF). The Hospitalist. 9 (3): 43–44.
  3. ^ Walkinshaw, Erin (September 20, 2011). "Middle-of-the-night medicine is rarely patient-centred". CMAJ. 183 (13): 1467–1468. doi:10.1503/cmaj.109-3953. PMC 3176838. PMID 21859867. Retrieved 19 September 2021.
  4. ^ Beresford, Larry (8 January 2019). "The state of hospital medicine in 2018". The Hospitalist. Society of Hospital Medicine. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
  5. ^ Gonzalo, Jed (20 May 2015). "Impact of an Overnight Internal Medicine Academic Hospitalist Program on Patient Outcomes". J Gen Intern Med. 30 (12): 1795–1802. doi:10.1007/s11606-015-3389-0. PMC 4636563. PMID 25990190.
  6. ^ Catalanotti, Jillian S.; O’Connor, Alec B.; Kisielewski, Michael; Chick, Davoren A.; Fletcher, Kathlyn E. (2020-04-14). "Association Between Nocturnist Supervision and Perceived Overnight Supervision Adequacy Among Internal Medicine Residents in the US". JAMA. 323 (14): 1407. doi:10.1001/jama.2020.0875. ISSN 0098-7484. PMC 7157484.
  7. ^ Flores, Leslie (2 September 2011). "Nocturnists' Compensation Puzzles Practice Leaders". The Hospitalist. Society of Hospital Medicine. Retrieved June 19, 2020.


This page was last edited on 4 January 2024, at 04:22
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