Average number of ICU beds per MD?

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leviathan

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I'm looking at ICU job ads in the US, and a lot of them are advertising for 24-30 bed ICUs. As far as I can tell these jobs are solo positions and you're covering the entire ICU on your own? Is this a typical job for you guys?

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**** no. I solo cover one geographic, 12-bed ICU at my hospital that has 42 (technically up to 48) ICU beds. If we're unexpectedly man down, I may cover down and split a unit with one of my colleagues, or take the consult/triage phone, and then get a PA/NP to assist with admissions.
 
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Not the norm, but unfortunately these jobs do exist. Currently I have 10-15 patient encounters a day on average with an NP/PA.
 
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Average 12-16 with an np helping here and I could get by ok without the Np, less so on the higher end. We occasionally flex up to 20 and in that case np is essential to not be there 18+ hours
 
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When I started at my hospital a few years ago I had 15 patients on my service. We've since restructured and hired other intensivists. Now it's generally 8-12 on my service, plus another few consults / admits etc.

24-30 is unsafe, and any hospital that would do that will not stand by you when there's a bad outcome. Do not take a job like that.
 
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When I started at my hospital a few years ago I had 15 patients on my service. We've since restructured and hired other intensivists. Now it's generally 8-12 on my service, plus another few consults / admits etc.

24-30 is unsafe, and any hospital that would do that will not stand by you when there's a bad outcome. Do not take a job like that.
Years ago, I did some locums at an HCA hospital through their internal staffing company, ICC. My census was routinely 20-28 between two ICUs, solo. Not worth the money. A current colleague of mine came from another HCA hospital, where his solo coverage (ok, technically, he had an intern that was capped at about six patients) list was routinely 30+. He finally quit when he was handed a 46 patient list.

These places do exist, we should let others know that they exist, and actively discourage people from going there. Such greedy entities will constantly try to prey on physicians, and push the limits of what they can get away with, to maximize income for the administrators.
 
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Thanks for the info guys/gals!

I don't know if these were solo coverage or not, just the job descriptions said these were X bed ICUs and it wasn't clear if you were the only person or not. Sounds like that probably isn't the case!
 
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I'm looking at ICU job ads in the US, and a lot of them are advertising for 24-30 bed ICUs. As far as I can tell these jobs are solo positions and you're covering the entire ICU on your own? Is this a typical job for you guys?
I know of places that have 2-3 providers. Would they make it anymore desirable ?
 
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I know of places that have 2-3 providers. Would they make it anymore desirable ?
Two to three PHYSICIANS splitting 24-30 patients is pretty good. One physician with two to three PA/NPs covering 24-30 still sucks, as you're still responsible for all of those patients the PA/NPs see, you just have fewer full notes to write.
 
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Two to three PHYSICIANS splitting 24-30 patients is pretty good. One physician with two to three PA/NPs covering 24-30 still sucks, as you're still responsible for all of those patients the PA/NPs see, you just have fewer full notes to write.
Got it. Okay I'm glad I didnt take that gig then.
 
Two to three PHYSICIANS splitting 24-30 patients is pretty good. One physician with two to three PA/NPs covering 24-30 still sucks, as you're still responsible for all of those patients the PA/NPs see, you just have fewer full notes to write.

That’s how my hospital is set up unfortunate. 22 bed icu. Another 10-15 stepdown patients. Normal ICU census is about 16-17, however it can spike up quickly. I’ve routinely had 25 ICU contacts in a day.

3 NPs so I don’t have to write any notes. However dealing with the NPs fetish for consulting on everything, albumin, seroquel, and midodrine gets real tiring real fast.
 
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Unrelated, but in the interest of not starting a new thread, how common are ICU jobs which require one to be on-site for less than the usual 12 hours. Even with 7 on/7 off, that **** tends to get old fast.
 
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Unrelated, but in the interest of not starting a new thread, how common are ICU jobs which require one to be on-site for less than the usual 12 hours. Even with 7 on/7 off, that **** tends to get old fast.
My ICU week I cover the OR and ICU 24 hours. After last case and no active things in the ICU, I can be home call. Then I get 7 days off.
 
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Unrelated, but in the interest of not starting a new thread, how common are ICU jobs which require one to be on-site for less than the usual 12 hours. Even with 7 on/7 off, that **** tends to get old fast.
My gig has a soft 8-10 hour requirement but nobody enforces it. Nights can be from home and are admits only so can knock an admit out then leave if desired.
 
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My gig has a soft 8-10 hour requirement but nobody enforces it. Nights can be from home and are admits only so can knock an admit out then leave if desired.
When you say nights do you mean rounding on the unit and being in house during the day then on call and coming in for admits at night?

Or that you’re on a block of nights but can go home and sleep for part of the night?

Because it it’s the second one that sounds lovely.
 
When you say nights do you mean rounding on the unit and being in house during the day then on call and coming in for admits at night?

Or that you’re on a block of nights but can go home and sleep for part of the night?

Because it it’s the second one that sounds lovely.
It is the second one day shift ends at 6p
 
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