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Transformation of inpatient care - It is time to revolutionize pr | 38949
Internal Medicine: Open Access

Internal Medicine: Open Access
Open Access

ISSN: 2165-8048

+44 1300 500008

Transformation of inpatient care - It is time to revolutionize primary care


2nd International Conference on Internal Medicine & Hospital Medicine

September 13-14, 2017 Dallas, USA

Venkataraman Palabindala

University of Mississippi Medical Center, USA

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: Intern Med

Abstract :

The healthcare landscape is constantly evolving whether it is influenced by legislative reform, latest technology or new drugs and treatment protocols. What continues to remain consistent though is escalating costs and poor patient outcomes, regardless of our ability to integrate the best in evidence-based medicine into our practice. Patients who cannot afford insurance make regular use of ER, this is a poor use of highly trained staff and scarce resources, it also does very little to provide effective management of chronic diseases. The relationship between primary care physicians (PCP) and acute care can be tenuous and is hindered by ineffective communication, often PCP not being notified when a patient came to the hospital. Improving the relationship between PCP and hospital is vital if we improve health of patients and health system as a whole. The role of hospitalists is not one that is intended to replace primary health care services; rather it is a part of patient��?s larger health care team. Hospitalists work towards improving transitions in care and seeing that treatment received in hospital is appropriately coordinated with PCP at discharge. There is a lot of misunderstanding about hospitalists. Increasing number of hospitalists in the United States is reflection in the ever increasing specialization in medicine that sees patient care fragmented into a collection of body parts. Specialists too focused on their organ system issues and quickly move onto the next patient in a stream of referrals from the community and within the hospital. On the other hand, hospitalists offer more comprehensive care that addresses immediate and chronic health issues that shown to reduce length of stay and the number of hospital acquired infections. Hospitalists are also on the front line of quality improvement initiatives and are able to initiate and drive quality metrics that improve care and reduce costs. Another advantage of hospitalists is to understand business component of medicine while maintaining a patient-centered focus. This is of benefit to both patients and hospitals, as hospitalists see a significant number of patients in diverse clinical settings, they are uniquely positioned to understand the larger issues facing the hospital, rather than just those within a specific unit or speciality area. Hospitalists not only improve the inpatient experience, but they also set patients up for the best transition. Rather than suggesting that hospitalists are the embodiment of everything that is wrong with the current state of our healthcare system, hospitalists should be thought of as effective and efficient care coordinators to view patients holistically. Improving patient outcomes is not only the end, rather it is the responsibility of all care providers to put their patient��?s front and center in both the hospital and in primary care. Hospitalists set patients up for a successful transition back into the community and more effort in building stronger relationships with primary care teams. Ultimately, quality care provision to patients should serve as a prime motivating factor regardless of location.

Biography :

Venkataraman Palabindala held various leadership positions starting from residency as Chief Medical resident at GBMC hospital, Clerkship director and Home health director at SAMC hospital, founder and president of Alabama Wiregrass Chapter of SHM. He is now Division Chief of Hospital Medicine at University of Mississippi Medical Center (UMC) and Chapter Leader for Gulf States SHM chapter. He also contributes to other roles at UMC as Medicine Dept Physician Advisor, Denial steering committee lead, Length of stay task force lead. He received both Fellow of American College of Physicians and Senior Fellow of Hospital Medicine degrees within 4 years after his graduation and listed as youngest hospitalist in ACP top 10 for year 2016. He have been part of SHM National Leadership committee, SHM National IT committee, and won Silver chapter award as Wiregrass chapter leader. he have been part of 30 posters in different state and national meetings. He won resident research award all 3 yrs during residency. My primary interest is resident education, patient safety, health informatics.

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