Internal medicine circa 2005: 60 percent enter subspecialties. 15 percent become general internists, and more than half of those are becoming hospitalists.
"It really is the very rare person who wants to do generalist practice"
Tagged as: Hospital-Based Medicine, Hospitalist
More in Uncategorized
-
Most Popular
Past Week
-
Medicine’s struggle for inclusivity
Shah-Naz H. Khan, MD | Physician -
Venture-backed telemental health care companies are creating a new opioid epidemic
Tamir Aldad, MD, MBA | Meds -
Unworthiness nearly killed me
Jillian Rigert, MD, DMD | Physician -
Working patients and health care [PODCAST]
The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast -
Navigating COVID: a journey from academic intensity to healing
Nicole M. King, MD | Conditions -
Supporting medical resident families [PODCAST]
The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
-
Past 6 Months
-
Medicine’s struggle for inclusivity
Shah-Naz H. Khan, MD | Physician -
Medicine is not apolitical: Your vote dictates your ability to practice medicine
Elizabeth Picazo | Policy -
Venture-backed telemental health care companies are creating a new opioid epidemic
Tamir Aldad, MD, MBA | Meds -
Elite access vs. public scrutiny: Medication disparities exposed
L. Joseph Parker, MD | Meds -
How Enhanced Recovery After Surgery solves our opioid problems
Amy Baxter, MD | Meds -
Real pain deserves real treatment
L. Joseph Parker, MD | Conditions
-
Recent Posts
-
Navigating COVID: a journey from academic intensity to healing
Nicole M. King, MD | Conditions -
A tribute to primary care [PODCAST]
The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast -
Navigating post-match disappointment: What to do if you did not match
Rajani Katta, MD | Education -
Unworthiness nearly killed me
Jillian Rigert, MD, DMD | Physician -
Navigating family skepticism: a physician’s dilemma
Osmund Agbo, MD | Physician -
Biotechnology and biological warfare [PODCAST]
The Podcast by KevinMD | Podcast
-
Subscribe to KevinMD and never miss a story!
Get free updates delivered free to your inbox.