We surveyed 241 board-certified internists affiliated with a large teaching hospital (Boston, Mass) before implementing a
hospitalist service to determine attitudes towards providing inpatient care and the hospitalist model. Of physicians surveyed,
66% responded. Most disagreed that inpatient care is “an inefficient use of my time,” only 10% felt a hospitalist service
would improve patient satisfaction, and 54% felt it would hurt patient-doctor relationships. Multivariable analyses suggest
that physicians physically furthest from their inpatient site were had more favorable attitudes toward the hospitalist model;
more experienced and busier physicians were more negative. Future investigations should determine strategies for implementing
the hospitalist model which address physicians’ concerns.