The hospitalist movement--a complex adaptive response to fragmentation of care in hospitals.
- Author:
Kheng Hock LEE
1
Author Information
1. Department of Family Medicine & Continuing Care, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore. lee.kheng.hock@sgh.com.sg
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH:
Australia;
Diffusion of Innovation;
Hospitalists;
trends;
Hospitals;
Singapore;
United States
- From:Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore
2008;37(2):145-150
- CountrySingapore
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
The increasing complexity of healthcare is accelerating the rate of specialisation in medicine, which in turn aggravates the fragmentation of care in hospitals. The hospitalist movement advocates for the return of generalist physicians to the hospital to provide general and more holistic medical care to inpatients. This can be seen as an adaptive response to care fragmentation. Starting in the mid-1990s in North America, where the impact of healthcare complexity and fragmentation has been most widely felt, the hospital movement has gained strength and spread across the continent rapidly. This paper examines the phenomenon of the hospitalist movement in the United States, Canada and Singapore. The conclusion is that variants of the hospital movement may emerge in different parts of the world as healthcare systems adapt to common global trends that drive the increasing complexity of healthcare.