By CARLA K. JOHNSON, AP Medical
Writer
Fri Jul 2, 2010 7:31 am ET
CHICAGO – Emergency rooms, the
only choice for patients who can't find care
elsewhere, may grow even more crowded with longer
wait times under the nation's new health law.
That might come as a surprise to
those who thought getting 32 million more people
covered by health insurance would ease ER crowding.
It would seem these patients would be able to get
routine health care by visiting a doctor's office,
as most of the insured do.
But it's not that simple.
Consider:
_There's already a shortage of
front-line family physicians in some places and
experts think that will get worse.
_People without insurance aren't
the ones filling up the nation's emergency rooms.
Far from it. The uninsured are no more likely to use
ERs than people with private insurance, perhaps
because they're wary of huge bills.
_The biggest users of emergency
rooms by far are Medicaid recipients. And the new
health insurance law will increase their ranks by
about 16 million. Medicaid is the state and federal
program for low-income families and the disabled.
And many family doctors limit the number of Medicaid
patients they take because of low government
reimbursements.
_ERs are already crowded and
hospitals are just now finding solutions.
Rand Corp. researcher Dr. Arthur
L. Kellermann predicts this from the new law: "More
people will have coverage and will be less afraid to
go to the emergency department if they're sick or
hurt and have nowhere else to go.... We just don't
have other places in the system for these folks to
go."
Kellermann and other experts
point to Massachusetts, the model for federal health
overhaul where a 2006 law requires insurance for
almost everyone. Reports from the state find ER
visits continuing to rise since the law passed —
contrary to hopes of its backers who reasoned that
expanding coverage would give many people access to
doctors offices.
Massachusetts reported a 7
percent increase in ER visits between 2005 and 2007.
A more recent estimate drawn from Boston area
hospitals showed an ER visit increase of 4 percent
from 2006 to 2008 — not dramatic, but still a bit
ahead of national trends.
"Just because we've insured
people doesn't mean they now have access," said Dr.
Elijah Berg, a Boston area ER doctor. "They're
coming to the emergency department because they
don't have access to alternatives."
Crowding and long waits have
plagued U.S. emergency departments for years. A 2009
report by the Government Accountability Office,
Congress' investigative arm, found ER patients who
should have been seen immediately waited nearly a
half-hour.
"We're starting out with crowded
conditions and anticipating things will only get
worse," said American College of Emergency
Physicians president Dr. Angela Gardner.
Federal stimulus money and the
new health law address the primary care shortage
with training for 16,000 more providers, said Health
and Human Services Department spokeswoman Jessica
Santillo.
But many experts say solving ER
crowding is more complicated.
What's causing crowding? Imagine
an emergency department with a front door and a back
door.
There's crowding at both ends.
At the front door, ERs are
strained by an aging population and more people with
chronic illnesses like diabetes. Many ERs closed
during the 1990s, leaving fewer to handle the load.
The American Hospital Association's annual survey
shows a 10 percent decline in emergency departments
from 1991 to 2008. Meanwhile, emergency visits rose
dramatically.
At the back door, ER patients
ready to be admitted — in hospital lingo, ready to
"go upstairs" — must compete for beds with patients
scheduled for elective surgeries, which bring in
more money. "If you've got 10 ER patients and 10
elective surgeries," Kellermann asked rhetorically,
"which are you going to give the beds to?"
That's why easing crowding will
take more than just access to primary care. It also
will take hospitals that run more efficiently,
moving patients through the system and getting ER
patients upstairs more quickly, Kellermann said.
Ideas that work include bedside
admitting, where a staffer takes a patient's
insurance information as treatment starts.
That and other strategies are
being tried at St. Francis Hospital and Health
Centers in Indianapolis. There, the performance of
nurse managers is measured by how long admitted
patients wait in the emergency department for a bed
upstairs.
And to stave off inappropriate ER
visits, the hospitals have opened after-hours
clinics staffed by primary care doctors to handle
patients who can't leave work to see a doctor, said
Indianapolis hospital executive Keith Jewell. ER
wait times have fallen.
A Chicago hospital, too, is
readying for the onslaught of ER patients. On the
city's South Side, Advocate Trinity Hospital handles
40,000 emergency visits a year and is expecting more
because of the new law.
Greeter Stephanie Bailey makes
sure patients don't get frustrated while they're
waiting. She can take their vital signs and inform
staff if the patient is about to leave without
treatment.
Inside the emergency department,
a giant sheet of paper hangs on a wall. It's
hand-lettered in orange and purple, and tracks daily
progress on hospital goals: How many patients left
before they were treated? How many minutes did
patients stay in the ER?
On a recent day, the note said
"0.0 percent" of the patients left without
treatment. Someone had added a smiley face. But
there was no smiley face next to the average ER
length of stay for the same day — nearly four hours.
The hospital's goal is three.