NYMC Faculty Publications

Understaffed and Overworked: The Stark Reality of Acute Care Surgeon Staffing in the United States, an Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma Multicenter Study

Authors

Patrick B. Murphy, Medical College of Wisconsin
Jamie J. Coleman, University of Louisville School of Medicine
Danielle J. Wilson, Medical College of Wisconsin
Morgan Maring, Medical College of Wisconsin
Jaclyn Gellings, Medical College of Wisconsin
Elise Biesboer, Medical College of Wisconsin
Tovy H. Kamine, UMass Chan Medical School - Baystate
Kaushik Mukherjee, Loma Linda University Health
Stephanie Bonne, Hackensack University Medical Center
Melissa M. Boltz, Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center
Robert D. Winfield, University of Kansas Medical Center
Ryan P. Dumas, UT Southwestern Medical Center
Jason Kurle, Detroit Medical Center
Roseanna Guzman-Curtis, Norton College of Medicine
Jason D. Sciarretta, Emory University School of Medicine
Baila Maqbool, UNM School of Medicine
Bryan C. Morse, Maine Medical Center
Michael W. Cripps, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
Stephen Gondek, Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Galinos Barmparas, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Jordan Lilienstein, University of California, San Francisco
Jeffry Nahmias, UCI School of Medicine
Lee Faucher, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Charles V. Bayouth, Covenant Medical Center
Tanya Egodage, Cooper University Hospital
Lisa Marie Knowlton, Stanford University
John D. Berne, Broward Health Medical Center
Charles Fasanya, Good Samaritan University Hospital
Meredith Shaddix, Division of General and Trauma Surgery
Lewis E. Jacobson, St. Vincent Hospital - Indianapolis
Michael S. Farrell, Lehigh Valley Hospital and Health Network
Luis G. Fernandez, University of Texas Health Center at Tyler

Author Type(s)

Faculty

DOI

10.1097/TA.0000000000004700

Journal Title

Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2025

Department

Surgery

Keywords

Acute care surgery, FTE, full-time employment, shortage

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

Abstract

OBJECTIVES Rightsizing the workforce to clinical demand requires a balance of work intensity, productivity, and a definition of clinical full-time equivalent (cFTE). We hypothesized a shortage of acute care surgeons based on a 204-shift per year (average, 17 per month) definition of a 1.0 cFTE established in our prior mixed-methods study (two service weeks plus five calls per month). METHODS This multicenter study used mixed methods, integrating clinical schedules (CY2022), work relative value units, and qualitative insights from semistructured interviews (July 2023 to June 2024). Schedules were converted to shifts (8-14 hours). Hospitals were short-staffed when shift demand exceeded supply based on each surgeon's cFTE. Interviews explored clinical demand and staffing challenges. Descriptive analysis and a deductive-inductive thematic analysis were performed. RESULTS Forty Level I/II hospitals representing 412 acute care surgeons (287 cFTEs) from 25 states were included. Seventy-nine percent of hospitals were short-staffed. Compared with well-staffed hospitals, short-staffed hospitals had fewer cFTEs (6.5 [interquartile range (IQR), 3] vs. 8.6 [IQR, 3], p < 0.05), a higher demand for clinical work (1,889 [IQR, 933] vs. 1,388 [IQR, 674] shifts, p = 0.05) and a higher work relative value unit/cFTE (8,779 vs. 7,456, p = 0.12). The aggregate clinical demand exceeded available surgeon capacity by 21% overall. Based on volume, a 1.0 cFTE is needed for every 285 (IQR, 169) trauma admissions. There was a deficit of 75 cFTEs across the centers. Key themes identified were related to the value of acute care surgery and balancing unpredictable demand, intensity, and efficiency. CONCLUSION There appears to be a shortage of acute care surgeons in the United States when a definition of 204 shifts per year cFTE is applied. Hospitals face significant financial and administrative barriers to workforce expansion despite the overabundance of clinical volume. Future research is needed to ascertain the effects of expanding the existing workforce on both clinical outcomes and surgeon well-being.

Share

COinS