Surgical Critical Care Physician
Nashville, Tennessee, United States

Job Summary

Occupation Physician
Specialty Surgery-General
Degree Required MD/DO
Position Type Full-Time
Work Environment Hospital Clinic/Private Practice
Location 77339 , Kingwood, Texas, United States
Visa Sponsorship No

Job Description

Last Update: 12/21/24

Description

Specialization:
Surgery Acute Care
Surgery Critical Care

Job Summary:

HCA Houston Healthcare Kingwood has partnered with Extant Healthcare to manage their growing trauma program. With over 17 years’ experience in trauma management, Extant Healthcare was founded and is still led by trauma surgeons. We are financially stable with immense growth opportunities on the horizon.

Trauma Program:
  • 457-bed Acute Care Facility
  • Level II Trauma Facility
  • Annual ER Volume 100k
  • 2,200 annual trauma activations
  • 10-12 days of EGS all per Month
  • 10 bed trauma ICU
  • Daily APP support
  • GME Program
Trauma Surgeon Criteria:
  • Board Certified Surgery with Trauma/Surgical Critical Care Fellowship preferred
We offer full time employee benefits including:
  • Competitive Compensation
  • 401k Retirement Account
  • Medical, Dental, Vision, Disability, Life Insurance
  • $5,000/ yr CME Allowance
  • Malpractice Coverage
  • Backend operational support
Community:
  • At 655 square miles, the City of Houston could contain the cities of New York, Washington, Boston, San Francisco, Seattle, Minneapolis, and Miami.
  • Fourth most populous city in the U.S. with 2.3 million residents
  • Houston ranks first among U.S. cities where paychecks stretch the furthest, according to Forbes
  • 198 golf courses within a 50-mile radius of downtown Houston
  • The City of Houston offers a 300-mile interconnected bikeway network spread over 500 square miles.
The Hospital:

HCA Houston Healthcare Kingwood has provided the northeast Houston community for more than 25 years. We are dedicated to providing comprehensive, quality care, close to home. Getting care quickly when you are injured or ill is always important, but in cased of heart attack, stroke, brain injury or other emergency situations, it is critical. Treatment options and outcomes for these critical situations decrease with each second that passes before patients receive help.