Henry Pitzele, MD
Jesse Brown VA Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois
Relative shielding from litigation restores the physician-patient relationship and allows us to actually care for our patient instead of concentrating on protecting ourselves. Longevity and predictability of career: In the current climate of change in insurance, payment, and oversight of medical decision-making, the VA offers a system that is unlikely to change in the near future. We will not see our department contract sold out from under us. We won’t see our pay decreased, and we won’t be downsized. Opportunities and funding for career development: the VA abounds with chances for professional development, both within emergency medicine (directorship, VA and national leadership, research, and teaching) and outside EM (local hospital leadership, non-EM development opportunities in integrative medicine, women’s health, informatics, emergency medical services, policy, etc.) Hands-down, VA patients are the best patient population of any American medical system. I was thanked by patients and families more in my first week of work at the VA than in the preceding four years of urban, community EM.
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ACEP Now: Vol 34 – No 03 – March 2015Peter Hasby, MD
Ft. Meade VA Medical Center, South Dakota
Eligibility for VA services includes patient financial need. In other words, our patients are not only US military veterans, but most often low income. Many commonly use the VA not because they have no other option, but because they are proud of their veteran status and happy with our service to them. So, we see grateful patients, giving us the privilege to serve a low-income population without having to personally face the financial challenges that may impact a civilian hospital.
Alan Sorkey, MS, MD, FACEP
Overton Brooks VA Medical Center, Shreveport, Louisiana
I have never been told thank you so often as by patients at the VA. Emergency medicine is relatively new at the VA, and it is very rewarding to makes changes that improve emergency services for the veterans and improve the care provided. The VA was the perfect transition from 20-plus years of full-bore private sector emergency medicine. The potential for career advancement is very good. As a former independent contractor, I wish I had known about the opportunity to work as little as one-fourth time at the VA and be eligible for full benefits—this is the ideal situation for many in emergency physicians. Anyone with prior military service can “purchase” that time towards Federal retirement.
Curt Dill, MD
VA NY Harbor Healthcare System, New York
We are modern trailblazers for emergency medicine. Veterans are entitled to the highest quality of care from an emergency department. Emergency medicine professional organizations now dominate the training of acute care physicians. As such, EM can meet its own standard by providing emergency care to all in need, including veterans who receive their care in VA hospitals. Students and EM residents rarely have an opportunity to
see post-traumatic stress disorder, victims of military sexual trauma, and other conditions that disproportionately affect veterans. Understanding these entities is necessary and valuable for the sophisticated development of the modern emergency physician.
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2 Responses to “Emergency Physicians Find Opportunities for Patient Care, Career Advancement in VA Hospitals”
April 3, 2015
HELENAs number of patients is increasing in hospitals, so are the physicians. So, it must be the priority of any physician to take good care of the patient. Besides physical treatment, understanding mental state of a patient is equally important as it helps in curing the person fast due to placebo effect.
April 5, 2015
Edward L. Fieg DOIn his second inagural address and with the words, “To care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow, and his orphan,” President Lincoln affirmed the government’s obligation to care for those injured during the war and to provide for the families of those who perished on the battlefield. Appreciate those EDPs who are willing to do so.