• J Hosp Med · Nov 2022

    Growth trends of the adult hospitalist workforce between 2012 and 2019.

    • Joshua Lapps, Bradley Flansbaum, Luci K Leykum, Heidi Bischoff, and Eric Howell.
    • Society of Hospital Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
    • J Hosp Med. 2022 Nov 1; 17 (11): 888892888-892.

    BackgroundAccurately identifying the number of practicing hospitalists across the United States continues to be a challenge. Characterizing the workforce is important in the context of healthcare reforms and public reporting.ObjectiveWe sought to estimate the number of adult hospitalists practicing in the United States over an 8-year period, to examine patterns in growth, and begin to explore billing patterns.Design, Settings, And ParticipantsRetrospective study using national Medicare Part B claims datasets. We applied a commonly used 90% threshold of billing hospital visit-associated Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System codes to identify adult hospitalists in publicly available Medicare Provider Utilization and Payment data for 2012-2019. We then analyzed billing patterns for those identified hospitalists.Main Outcomes And MeasuresIdentify trends in the number of identified adult hospitalists, including those self-identified. Compare hospitalists' billing to that of non-hospitalist Internal Medicine and Family Medicine physicians.ResultsWe saw more than a 50% growth rate of practicing adult hospitalists between 2012 and 2019. In 2019, we identified 44,037 adult hospitalists.ConclusionsThe number of adult hospitalists continued to grow at a consistent rate, such that hospitalists are in the top five largest physician specialties in the United States. In the absence of more formal identification and consistent use by hospitalists, a threshold continues to be a meaningful tool to characterize the workforce.© 2022 Society of Hospital Medicine.

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