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Volume 340:1362-1363 April 29, 1999 Number 17
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Whither Continuity of Care?

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As I walk down the halls of the hospital to see my patients, I cannot help but notice a marked change. The sight of a primary care internist taking care of his or her patients while they are hospitalized is becoming increasingly rare, thanks to the supplanting of general internists by "hospitalists" in the name of cost effectiveness. It seems as though, almost overnight, general internists have been declared unqualified to take care of hospitalized patients. Family-practice physicians still review their patients' charts and take care of their patients while they are hospitalized. Ironically, general internists, who are often employees . . . [Full Text of this Article]

Mrs. Smith is Hospitalized.

Mrs. Smith is Too Healthy for the Hospital but Too Ill to Go Home.

Mrs. Smith Goes Home.


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Infectious Disease Consultants
St. Louis, MO 63141


Related Letters:

Whither Continuity of Care?
Freer S. D., Morris W., Marshall M. J., Rakatansky H., Manian F. A.
Extract | Full Text  
N Engl J Med 1999; 341:850-852, Sep 9, 1999. Correspondence

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