Background/Objectives: In March 2018, a tertiary teaching hospital launched a medical hospitalist team. This study presents the clinical characteristics and outcomes of medical hospitalist care and reveals the relationship between them. Methods: This study included 4003 patients first admitted to the hospitalist team via emergency room and then discharged from the hospitalist team between March 2018 and November 2022. The patients were admitted either to the teaching admitter hospitalist team or the hospitalist-led acute medical unit (AMU). Afterward, the patients were either discharged, if possible, within a few days or transferred to ward hospitalists if assigned wards for hospitalist care were available. Results: The patients’ mean Charlson Comorbidity Index score was 3.5 and the mean National Early Warning Score was 3.4. Of the admissions, 44.2% of the patients were admitted to the AMU, and 26.8% received an early consultation with a subspecialist. Each hospitalist managed 12.8 patients per month on average. The patients’ mean LOS was 14.52 days, 10.5% of patients died during hospitalization, and 13.0% of patients had unscheduled readmission within 1 month. The patients’ mean total cost per hospital stay was 572,836 won per day. Admission to the AMU was associated with a lower total cost per hospital stay, but the relationships with mortality, readmission, and LOS were not significant. Conclusions: The study reports on the outcomes of implementing a medical hospitalist care system that combines short-term admission wards with integrated care models to manage complex cases. These findings provide insights into optimizing hospitalist systems for improved patient outcomes.