1. 2007 Survey of Medical Toxicology Practice
- Author
-
Anne L. Harvey, Saralyn Williams, A. Nelson Avery, Beth A. Baker, Curtis Snook, Kevin C. Osterhoudt, Suzanne R. White, Lewis S. Nelson, Robert C. Korte, and Carl R. Baum
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Certification ,Time Factors ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Specialty ,Poison control ,Population health ,Toxicology ,Pesticide toxicity ,Maintenance of Certification ,Medical toxicology ,medicine ,Humans ,Original Study ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Psychiatry ,Response rate (survey) ,business.industry ,Data Collection ,people.cause_of_death ,Family medicine ,Medicine ,Clinical Competence ,Board certification ,people ,business - Abstract
To date, there appear to be no studies investigating the practice settings of all Medical Toxicology (MT) diplomates. The MT Assessment of Practice Performance Taskforce queried all MT diplomates about their current practice settings relative to the number of patients seen, the most common diagnoses, and the percent of time spent in their roles as medical toxicologists (MTs) and in their primary specialty. One hundred twenty-seven surveys were completed (44% response rate). Seventy-nine percent of respondents were affiliated with poison centers. Eighty-eight percent of participants were clinically active and reported seeing or consulting on behalf of at least ten patients over a 2-year period. Acetaminophen toxicity was the most common diagnosis encountered by respondents. Other common diagnoses included antidepressant toxicity, antipsychotic toxicity, mental status alteration, metal/environmental toxicity, envenomation, and pesticide toxicity. While respondents were likely to spend more time in direct patient care in their primary specialty, compared to consulting on behalf of patients, they were more likely to consult on behalf of patients in their role as MTs. Respondents spent more time in research, education, and population health in their role as an MT than in their primary specialty. Administrative activities were more commonly reported in association with the respondents' primary specialty than in their role as MTs. Most MTs encounter certain diagnoses with significant frequency and see a substantial number of patients within these categories. The majority spends more time on direct patient care in their primary specialty but is actively engaged in MT education, research, population health, and administration. A longitudinal assessment of MT practice patterns could inform MT curricular development and practice performance evaluation.
- Published
- 2010