|
It may surprise many patients and families to learn that more and more Family Physicians—those who have long cared for patients across generations—are quietly withdrawing from hospital work. Not because they no longer care, but because the hospital has changed. The system has changed. And what was once a noble and personal calling has become, for many of us, an untenable risk.
As someone who spent years walking the halls of our community hospital, caring for my patients in their most vulnerable moments, let me share with you why this matters—because it absolutely affects you and your loved ones. The Disappearing Doctor It used to be that your Family Physician not only saw you in the clinic but admitted you to the hospital, followed your progress, explained test results, spoke with your family, and made the final call when difficult decisions loomed. We were your advocate, your constant, your guide through the maze. Today, that continuity is being severed. Hospitals increasingly rely on "hospitalists"—physicians who work only within hospital walls and often have never met the patient before. Meanwhile, many Family Physicians are choosing (or being forced) to give up hospital privileges altogether. Why? The Captain Goes Down with Every Ship There’s a legal principle called the "captain of the ship" doctrine. It holds that the physician overseeing the patient's care is legally responsible for everything that happens during that hospitalization—whether or not they were directly involved. If a respiratory therapist administers a mistimed treatment, if a nurse delays a medication, if a tech mispositions a patient, the liability often falls squarely on the physician. Not the hospital. Not the individual. The physician. It doesn't matter if the doctor wasn't even in the building. If their name is on the chart, they are the lightning rod for lawsuits. And we live in a litigious society. The sad reality is that some lawsuits are opportunistic, born not of actual negligence but of frustration, grief, or a chance for financial gain. The result? Physicians are forced to carry crushing liability for events outside their control—while navigating a hospital culture that often treats them not as partners, but as expendable. Professional Narcissism and the Death of Collaboration Many patients assume that hospitals are harmonious places where professionals collaborate toward a shared goal. Ideally, yes. But in reality, a kind of professional narcissism has crept into the system. It's the belief—sometimes subtle, sometimes not—that "my role matters most." Physical therapists, case managers, respiratory therapists, and even technicians may assert themselves into medical decision-making. Aides may offer opinions to families in the hallway. Nurses—some wonderfully dedicated, others, not so much—may have personal biases against certain physicians, quietly influencing how families view a doctor’s plan of care. Families often hear from five different people, each insisting a CT scan is “urgent” or a transfer to ICU is “needed,” when in truth, the physician—who has the full picture—knows that restraint, observation, or a gentler pace of intervention is more appropriate. But if that physician isn’t physically present in the room to defend their judgment, their voice is drowned out by the chorus. In the end, the Family Physician becomes a scapegoat. A shadow figure held responsible for decisions distorted by a crowd. The Cost of Separation When a Family Physician resigns from hospital practice, the patient loses more than a provider. They lose a relationship. They lose context. They lose the person who has seen them in wellness and in crisis, who knows their history, their values, their fears, their family dynamics. That physician often understands what the patient would want even before it’s said. In contrast, a hospitalist may see a hundred different patients in a week. They may be competent, even caring. But they are strangers trying to make quick judgments in a high-pressure environment. They cannot replace the trust built over years with a Family Physician. A System in Decline We cannot pretend that this shift doesn’t matter. When hospitals become impersonal bureaucracies, when communication breaks down, when physicians are forced out by risk and disrespect, quality of care suffers. Families are left confused. Patients are left over-tested, over-treated, or poorly managed. And no one is truly accountable—except, ironically, the one doctor who tried to hold the line. What Can Families Do?
The next time you walk into a hospital room and find your Family Physician absent, don’t assume they abandoned you. They may have been pushed out by a system that no longer respects the sacredness of continuity and the quiet heroism of responsibility. And until we fix that system, we all pay the price.
0 Comments
|
Categories
All
Archives
October 2025
|
RSS Feed