When, If Ever, Is It Appropriate to Regard a Patient as “Too Medically Complex” for One Inpatient Service, But Not Another?

Link to article at PubMed

AMA J Ethics. 2023 Dec 1;25(12):E873-877. doi: 10.1001/amajethics.2023.873.

ABSTRACT

Patients with chronic health conditions often find their admission for orthopedic surgery from the emergency department held up due to disagreement between orthopedists and internal medicine physicians, such as hospitalists. One reason for this delay is that orthopedists must decide which patients they will admit. Although this decision is based on clinical criteria, variation in orthopedists' practices and views of a patient's condition's medical complexity is a common source of physician disagreement. This commentary on a case describes constraints on hospitalists and orthopedists, as well as other factors in patient disposition, and suggests quality improvements to admissions processes that might help mitigate the distress that patients can experience as a result of health professional disagreement.

PMID:38085989 | DOI:10.1001/amajethics.2023.873

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