Utilization of Locum Tenens in Neurosurgery

Despite its rising popularity, little has been described about locum tenens employment (locums) in neurosurgery. This study provides the first nationwide overview of the locums neurosurgery experience. An anonymous online survey examined practice characteristics of respondents, extent of and satisfa...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inWorld neurosurgery Vol. 184; pp. e274 - e281
Main Authors Camarano, Joseph, Lefever, Devon, Kandregula, Sandeep, Abushehab, Nimer, Benzil, Deborah, Huntoon, Kristin, Mazzola, Catherine, McGuire, Laura, Heary, Robert, Parr, Ann, Hussain, Namath, Perez-Cruet, Mick, Shuer, Lawrence, Stacy, Jason, Guthikonda, Bharat
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.04.2024
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Summary:Despite its rising popularity, little has been described about locum tenens employment (locums) in neurosurgery. This study provides the first nationwide overview of the locums neurosurgery experience. An anonymous online survey examined practice characteristics of respondents, extent of and satisfaction with locums, motivations for pursuing locums, case volumes, agencies used, compensation, and positive/negative aspects of experiences. Responses were collected between November 2020 and February 2021. Response rate for the 1852 neurosurgeons who opened the survey request was 4.9%; 36 of 91 respondents had previously worked locums and were commonly motivated by compensation or transitioning to new jobs or retirement. In our response group, 92% of locums respondents had taken more than one position and 47% had taken more than 10. Neurosurgeons performing <200 cases/year were significantly more likely to have also worked locums than those performing >200 cases/year (41.6% locums, 12.7% non-locums, P = 0.001). Responses showed that 69% of locums respondents earned $2000–$2999/day and 16% earned >$3500/day. Nearly 78% of locums respondents were satisfied with their experience(s) and 86% would take another future locums position. Being in practice for >15 years was significantly associated with satisfaction with locums (P = 0.03). Reported flaws included unfamiliarity with hospitals, limited continuity of care, credentialing burdens, and inadequate travel compensation. Locums is utilized by neurosurgeons across multiple practice types and may serve to complement workloads or “fill in gaps” between longer-term employment. Overall, locums neurosurgeons are well compensated, and the majority are satisfied with their experience(s). Inevitably, flaws still exist with locums employment, which may be the focus of organized efforts aiming to improve the experience.
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ISSN:1878-8750
1878-8769
1878-8769
DOI:10.1016/j.wneu.2024.01.109