What the Failure of the ER Match Says About the State of Health Care
And How Physician Coaches Can Change The Story
When I was in medical school, the cool, smart kids went into ER medicine. It was a hotly competitive residency, and there was no guarantee that you would match. Now things are entirely different. Over 550 residency spots went unfilled by US med school grads in the residency match this month. Some centers had zero applicants match to their programs. Compare this to 2021, when only 14 ER residency spots were not filled.
The reasons? Just about any physician in the US can tell you:
Disrespect fueled by social media personalities and irresponsible "news" outlets
Dangerous working conditions
Overloaded ERs being used as a source of primary care, often because people lack insurance or access
Corporatization of medicine with a focus on numbers of patients seen and metrics that often don't relate to patient care
Management of physicians by business people and those with less responsibility and training
Intrusive, redundant, and burdensome EHR requirements
Lack of adequate support staff
Some of my best friends are ER physicians. They are some of the hardest working people I know. These are the doctors who will save your life at 2 am, no matter who you are or whether or not you have insurance. And they are also the doctors that are tasked with waking up their colleagues at all hours of the night to request a consult or hospital admission. Most manage their work with grace, strength, and courage.
The steep decline in the desirability of ER residencies is a really scary trend. It’s easy to say that doctors can be replaced with mid-level care providers, but the truth is that the expertise, skill, responsibility and knowledge that an ER physician provides requires years of education, training, and commitment. Mid-levels can reduce some of the burden of less complex patients, but they are no substitute for a physician.
This sudden and shocking shift should be a call to action for hospital directors, ER directors, and the corporations and private equity firms who own and manage many of these practices.
As we wait to see how this recent revelation will impact the decisions and practices that affect ER physicians, it’s important that physicians take steps to stand up for ourselves and our profession. This is a new way of thinking about medical practice, but times have changed irrevocably. By learning how to work within the systems we now have, we can start to make important changes from the inside out. Ultimately, such changes will benefit not only physicians, but also their patients and indeed the very institutions and corporations that currently control our healthcare systems.
How can coaching help? Well clearly, coaching will not fix the problem. Coaching means working with one physician at a time, very much like patient care. But coaching will help you clarify your goals, identify your frustrations and obstacles, and give you the tools to create your way forward. Will that be
Negotiation, understanding your own value?
Creating a streamlined workflow that will allow you greater efficiency?
Acquiring new skills to make your time more effective?
Courage to make a lateral move to a new facility?
A switch to a different type of practice altogether?
A change in working hours?
Reframing conflicts so that you are able to create a more positive working environment?
Honing interpersonal skills?
Advocating for change in EHR management?
Regardless of your specialty, the healthcare world is shifting. The work you do matters. By recognizing your own worth and power, and by taking action that is beneficial to both you and your patients, you will be able to create a happier and more sustainable life.
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