Why I don’t want to continue practising general medicine and delivering the acute ‘take’
Author(s) -
Marcus Harbord
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
future hospital journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2055-3331
pISSN - 2055-3323
DOI - 10.7861/futurehosp.3-1-70
Subject(s) - acute medicine , specialty , acute care , medicine , unit (ring theory) , acute hospital , population , medical emergency , family medicine , nursing , intensive care medicine , health care , psychology , mathematics education , environmental health , economics , economic growth
Unscheduled admissions to hospital are usually coordinated by the acute assessment unit (AAU), often led in rotation by physicians from range of specialties, together with specialists in acute medicine. This hybrid model is a vestige since before the specialty of acute medicine was developed. The increasing elderly population means this needs to change, enabling elderly care physicians to work in parallel with acute physicians as the needs of patients in the AAU are largely served by these two disciplines. Specialties, including elderly care, should provide support by looking after patients with diseases in which they are expert, and by ensuring that the same specialist team looks after patients in the AAU and on downstream specialty wards. A major expansion in elderly care, and new ways of teamworking are required. A model of care is proposed.
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