Intended for healthcare professionals

Letters

Are generalists still needed in a specialised world?

BMJ 2000; 320 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.320.7251.1728 (Published 24 June 2000) Cite this as: BMJ 2000;320:1728

Role of accident and emergency doctors should be expanded

  1. Cliff Reid, specialist registrar in accident and emergency medicine
  1. North Hampshire Hospital, Basingstoke RG24 9NA
  2. Browning Street Surgery, Stafford ST16 3AT
  3. The General Infirmary, Leeds LS1 3EX
  4. The Medical Centre, Hemsby, Norfolk NR29 4EW

    EDITOR—Turnberg in his article on the survival of the general physician rightly highlights the potential problems posed when an undifferentiated emergency patient is cared for by medical subspecialists.1 Four models of care are proposed as possible solutions, including the development of specialised emergency physicians, calling for a new breed of doctor and a specific training programme, although its success would depend on having enough doctors who are sufficiently motivated to take on this type of work.

    The specialty of emergency medicine already exists, but its potential for contributing to a solution to the problem remains unfulfilled because of historical, cultural, and resource factors as well as perhaps the stubborn retention of the UK-specific name “accident and emergency medicine.”

    Turnberg alludes to the difficulties medical subspecialists have in maintaining their general skills and knowledge. Accident and emergency physicians now undergo a five year specialist training programme whose exit examination requires the demonstration of knowledge and skills in all aspects of clinical emergency medicine as well as evidence based critical appraisal and management skills. No such objective final assessment exists for trainees in general (internal) medicine. An expansion in the numbers of accident and emergency consultants, combined with a sociopolitical climate in which senior doctors' participation in all aspects of patient care will be demanded, suggests that the time is right to expand the role of accident and emergency doctors.

    I therefore propose a fifth model: the undifferentiated emergency patient is cared for on an admissions or observation unit integral to the hospital's emergency department, …

    View Full Text

    Log in

    Log in through your institution

    Subscribe

    * For online subscription