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Oncology hospitalist field is small, but growing


 

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Have you met an oncology hospitalist yet? If you haven’t, you probably will soon.

The latest offshoot of hospital medicine aims to take all the strengths of the hospitalist movement – increased efficiency and improved quality and safety – and apply them to inpatient cancer care.

While there is no typical oncology-hospitalist program, most manage the complications of a patient’s cancer and treatment, as well as providing some type of end-of-life services. Oncology hospitalists may be oncologists with an interest in taking care of hospitalized patients. Or they could be hospitalists trained in internal or family medicine, who have an interest in caring for cancer patients.

"People are very interested in this, and we really want to grow it," said Dr. Maria-Claudia Campagna, an oncology-hospitalist at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

Dr. Campagna is part of a nine-physician oncology-hospitalist program at MD Anderson. The program was launched in 2006 with just one hospitalist, but has grown to nine hospitalists over the last several years. And the program is in the process of recruiting three more physicians.

They are also piloting an observation unit geared toward oncology patients, she said.

Much like in the early days of hospital medicine, Dr. Campagna said the program initially got pushback from oncologists who didn’t want to give up care of their patients in the hospital. But over time, the hospitalists have proven their competence and oncologists have gotten even busier with their outpatient practices.

Courtesy Dr. Stephen Schleicher

Dr. Eddy Chen is a oncologist by training who now works as an oncology hospitalist at Dana-Farber/ Brigham and Women's Cancer Center in Boston.

"They know we take good care of their patients, so ultimately they trust our criteria. And when we don’t know, we tell them," Dr. Campagna said. "So we have a very symbiotic relationship."

The experience at MD Anderson is being replicated at cancer centers and academic medical centers around the country. Even some community hospitals are exploring the idea.

The reason is simple, said Dr. Eddy Chen, an oncology hospitalist at Dana-Farber/Brigham and Women’s Cancer Center in Boston. The combination of a coming shortage of oncologists combined with an expected surge in cancer patients among aging baby boomers means that virtually every hospital will see a marked increase in cancer patients over the next several years.

"In the future, there are going to be a lot more patients with cancer who are going to be coming into the hospital," Dr. Chen said. "And who is going to take care of these patients?"

But I’m not an oncologist ...

At Dana-Farber/Brigham and Women’s, they have three oncology hospitalists, including Dr. Chen. Along with the regular cadre of oncologists, they manage all of the hospitalized cancer patients. What makes hospitalist management different from that of the oncologists, who are treating both inpatients and outpatients, is the focus on quality improvement, patient safety, and research, said Dr. Chen.

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