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Physician (Neurology/Neurohospitalist) Jobs

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Physician (Neurology/Neurohospitalist)
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Join Bayhealth Medical Center as a Neurology Neurohospitalist in Dover or Milford. This role requires an MD, a completed Neurology residency, and BE/BC certification. You must hold or be eligible for a Delaware medical license. Provide expert neurological care in a supportive hospital-based setting.
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United States , Dover and Milford
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Not provided
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Bayhealth Hospital
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Until further notice
Discover rewarding and impactful Physician (Neurology/Neurohospitalist) jobs, a specialized and in-demand field within the medical profession. A Neurohospitalist is a neurologist who practices exclusively in a hospital setting, providing comprehensive neurological care to acutely ill inpatients. This role is central to the modern hospital system, focusing on the immediate diagnosis, management, and treatment of patients with serious neurological conditions. Professionals in these jobs bridge the gap between emergency medicine, critical care, and outpatient neurology, ensuring seamless, 24/7 expert care for hospitalized patients. The core responsibility of a Neurohospitalist involves the direct management of hospitalized patients with neurological disorders. This typically includes conducting detailed consultations in the emergency department, managing patients on the general medical floors, and often co-managing critically ill patients in intensive care units. Common conditions treated encompass acute strokes (often leading rapid-response thrombolysis and thrombectomy protocols), seizures and status epilepticus, encephalopathies, meningitis and encephalitis, acute neuromuscular disorders like Guillain-Barré syndrome, and complications of chronic neurological diseases such as multiple sclerosis or Parkinson's disease. The role demands proficiency in interpreting neuroimaging (CT, MRI), electroencephalograms (EEGs), and lumbar puncture results. A typical day involves rounding on a census of inpatients, developing and adjusting treatment plans, coordinating with a multidisciplinary team including hospitalists, intensivists, nurses, and therapists, and communicating closely with patients' families and outpatient neurologists for smooth care transitions. Neurohospitalists are also frequently involved in hospital protocol development, quality improvement initiatives for stroke and seizure care, and teaching medical students, residents, and fellows. Typical skills and requirements for these jobs are rigorous. Candidates must hold a Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) or Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.) degree, have completed a residency program in Neurology, and be board-eligible or board-certified in Neurology by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology. Most positions require or strongly prefer fellowship training in Neurocritical Care, Vascular Neurology, or Hospital Medicine, although dedicated Neurohospitalist fellowships are also emerging. Essential skills include exceptional clinical acumen, proficiency in urgent neurological procedures, strong communication and collaboration abilities, and the capacity to thrive in a fast-paced, high-stakes environment. A state medical license and relevant hospital privileges are mandatory. For physicians who enjoy acute care, complex problem-solving, and a shift-based schedule often free of long-term outpatient management, exploring Neurohospitalist jobs offers a dynamic and fulfilling career path at the forefront of inpatient neurological medicine.

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