Skip to main content
Top
Published in: Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery 5/2017

01-05-2017 | Orthopaedic Surgery

Informal (Hallway) medical consultation in orthopedics—is it as common as it seems?

Authors: Leonid Kandel, Yair Barzilay, Adi Friedman, Idan Ilsar, Ori Safran, Yoav Mattan

Published in: Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery | Issue 5/2017

Login to get access

Abstract

Introduction

Informal (hallway) medical consultation is an integral part of the physician’s work. As musculoskeletal complaints are very common, orthopedic surgeons stand in the frontline of this practice. Many of these consultations are poorly, if at all, documented, thus imposing a potential medical danger to the patient and a medicolegal danger to the surgeon. We conducted this first study to examine whether this practice is common among the orthopedic surgeons in university hospital.

Methods

In this prospective study, a 2-month record of informal consultations was kept. Six orthopedic surgeons—two joint reconstruction surgeons, one spine surgeon, two arthroscopy and sports medicine surgeons, and a shoulder surgeon participated. They recorded the details of the consulter, whether the consultation was for himself or somebody else, the major complaint, and whether it was a second opinion. All patients were advised to go to the formal orthopedic consultation and no advice or treatment was given. At the end of 2 months, each surgeon was asked to evaluate the percentage of cases he had failed to report.

Results

During the 2-month period, 158 people asked for informal (hallway) consultations. 11 of them (7%) were physicians, 114 (72%) were other hospital personnel, 26 (17%) were unrelated to hospital, and 6 (4%) were treated patients’ relatives. 93 (59%) of consultations were about the consulter himself and the rest were about a relative or a friend. 41 (26%) were requests for a second opinion. The estimated percentage of not reported cases was 10–40%; when the number of consultations was corrected for these figures, it reached 208 consultations in 2 months.

Discussion

In this prospective study, six participating surgeons recorded 158 informal consultation requests in 2 months. If a correction is performed, it averages 0.6 consultations a day for a surgeon (or, if only workdays are counted—0.8 consultations a day). Orthopedic surgeons should be aware of this frequent habit and send these patients to a formal consultation.
Literature
2.
go back to reference Weingarten MA (1985) Off the cuff consultations. Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 291(6505):1321–1322CrossRef Weingarten MA (1985) Off the cuff consultations. Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 291(6505):1321–1322CrossRef
3.
go back to reference Guberman D, Vardy DA, Klaus SN (1994) Corridor dermatology consultation en passant. Arch Dermatol 130(2):233–234CrossRefPubMed Guberman D, Vardy DA, Klaus SN (1994) Corridor dermatology consultation en passant. Arch Dermatol 130(2):233–234CrossRefPubMed
4.
go back to reference Peleg A, Peleg R, Porath A, Horowitz Y (1999) Hallway medicine: prevalence, characteristics and attitudes of hospital physicians. Israeli Med Assoc J 1(4):241–244 Peleg A, Peleg R, Porath A, Horowitz Y (1999) Hallway medicine: prevalence, characteristics and attitudes of hospital physicians. Israeli Med Assoc J 1(4):241–244
Metadata
Title
Informal (Hallway) medical consultation in orthopedics—is it as common as it seems?
Authors
Leonid Kandel
Yair Barzilay
Adi Friedman
Idan Ilsar
Ori Safran
Yoav Mattan
Publication date
01-05-2017
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery / Issue 5/2017
Print ISSN: 0936-8051
Electronic ISSN: 1434-3916
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00402-017-2667-1

Other articles of this Issue 5/2017

Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery 5/2017 Go to the issue