Posts Tagged ‘emergency rooms’

ER Visits on the Rise, Thanks to Quick Treatment

Monday, October 24th, 2011

Visits to hospital emergency rooms soared to an all-time high of 136 million in 2009, according to new estimates provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).  This represents an approximately 10 percent increase from the 2008 statistic of 123.8 million.  The CDC study is one of three examinations of ER use being released at the American College of Emergency Physicians meeting.  

According to the CDC, patients under the age of 15 accounted for 21 percent of ER visits in 2009; patients between 15 and 24 made up 15 percent; patients between 25 and 44 accounted for 28 percent; patients between 45 and 64, 21 percent; and patients 65 and older, 15 percent.  Breaking visits down by gender, the CDC noted that women visited the ER at a rate of 48 visits per 100, while men had a rate of 42.   

The expected sources of payments for ER visits were private insurance, 39 percent; Medicaid or State Children’s Health Insurance Program, 29 percent; Medicare, 17 percent; other and unknown, five percent each.  Nineteen percent of ER visitors reported that they had no insurance.  The most typical reasons for visiting the ER were stomach and abdominal pain, 9.6 million; fever, 7.4 million; chest pain, 7.2 million; cough, 4.7 million; headache, four million; and shortness of breath and back symptoms, 3.7 million each.  

Physicians attributed the sharp increase to both greater demand for services and improvements that allow ERs to treat patients faster.   “With the economy, people have lost their coverage and, given the fact the emergency department is the safety net, they come to us,” said Dr. Jay Kaplan, an emergency physician at Marin General Hospital who serves on the board of the emergency physicians’ organization.  The physicians contend that it is counterproductive to discourage patients from going to the ER to save money in healthcare costs because they say it doesn’t.  “We’re efficient.  We take care of acute patients and that’s what we do well,” said Dr. Paul Kivela, managing partner of Napa Valley Emergency Medical Group, and a board member of the American College of Emergency Physicians.  

According to Dr. Michael Gerardi, an ACEP board member, he and his colleagues want comprehensive medical liability reform that includes indemnification based on recognized guidelines, caps on non-economic damages and medical courts where providers are judged by medical peers.  “In America, we sue far too often for bad outcomes and not deviations from standard of care,” Gerardi said.  “The overall anxiety of patients and the lack of acceptance that bad outcomes happen are driving costs.”  Because ERs are safety-net providers, they have become increasingly overcrowded.  One factor is the passage in 1986 of the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, which requires hospitals to provide people with emergency services, despite their inability to pay.  

It has been estimated that 13.7 percent of all emergency room visits could be treated in retail medical clinics, which are typically based in pharmacies or grocery stores.  These facilities are equipped to treat a limited number of minor conditions, such as throat infections or urinary tract infections.  An additional 13.4 percent of emergency room visits could be handled by urgent-care clinics — an independent medical facility that can handle a broader scope of problems, such as minor fractures and more serious injuries.  Urgent-care clinics typically are open on evenings and weekends, fulfilling the need for patients with occurring before or after typical physician office hours.

Americans See Access to Trauma Centers Decline

Wednesday, October 12th, 2011

Approximately 25 percent of Americans had to travel farther in 2007 than in 2001 to access their nearest trauma center, published in Health Affairs.

In the 15 years between 1990 and 2005, nearly 339 or 30 percent of trauma centers closed, compared with just 66 closures between 1981 and 1991.  The majority of the centers closed because of financial problems resulting from treating too many uninsured patients and the cost of making life-saving resources available 24/7.  The study determined that the average increase in travel time to a trauma center was about 10 minutes, but that about 16 million people saw travel times increase by more than one-half hour.  Researchers found that residents of rural areas and communities with large minority populations, low-income and uninsured residents were most likely to be impacted.

“We’re not saying that we should build a trauma center on every street corner. But we do have evidence that access for certain populations is already pretty bad, and it’s getting worse,” Renee Hsia, lead researcher and emergency department doctor at San Francisco General Hospital.

When looked at in a different way, the study determined that 69 million Americans now have a longer trip to their closes trauma center than they did just 10 years ago.

The researchers studied longitude and latitude coordinates for every trauma center in the United States.  Next, they measured driving distances and times between trauma centers and area ZIP codes, factoring in population data.  They compared the results for 2001 and 2007, the most recent year for which data was available.  Hsia said the results surprised the researchers.

Designed to handle complex injuries, trauma centers are different from emergency rooms.  Someone with a broken leg should go to the emergency room; a person with multiple fractures should go to a trauma center.  A patient with a concussion can be treated in the emergency room, while someone with a brain injury should be taken to a trauma center.  Time is all important.  Medical experts agree that a severely injured victim’s chances of survival and returning to a normal life are optimal if they can get the right treatment within an hour.  It’s called the “golden hour,” derived from military medicine during the Vietnam War and still guiding medical units in Afghanistan and Iraq.  “A 30-minute increase means half that time is wasted on driving,” Hsia said.  “A quarter of the population is significant.”

“We’re not saying that we should build a trauma center on every street corner. That would not be cost-effective,” Hsia said.  “But we do have evidence that access for certain populations is already pretty bad, and it’s getting worse.”

Skeptical Federal Appellate Court Hears Arguments on the ACA

Wednesday, August 3rd, 2011

Attorneys representing 26 states – with Florida taking the lead – locked horns with the Obama administration in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit over the constitutionality of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA).Florida, 25 other states and the National Federation of Independent Business claim that the “individual mandate” violates the Constitution’s Commerce Clause by requiring that Americans buy healthcare insurance or pay a penalty.

Arguing for the Obama administration was acting Solicitor General, Neal Katyal, who said “People are seeking this good already in untold numbers.  The good of healthcare.  It’s purely financing.  It’s about failure to pay.  Not about failure to buy.”  Katyal pointed out that the 50 million Americans who currently lack healthcare insurance too often end up in emergency rooms for medical treatment, driving up costs.  Defending the law, Katyal emphasized the special nature of healthcare and the insurance market today.  He said billions of dollars incurred by people without insurance are passed on to people who carry insurance.  Arguing for the states, attorney Paul Clement conceded that the government can enact laws that people acquire healthcare insurance, but not until they need medical care.  Prior to that, “they’re not engaged in commerce.  They’re sitting in their living rooms,” Clement said.

The three-judge panel seemed to be skeptical about the government’s position. “I can’t find any case like this,” Chief Judge Joel Dubina said.  “If we uphold this, are there any limits” to the federal government’s power?  Judge Stanley Marcus said “I can’t find any case” in the past where the courts upheld “telling a private person they are compelled to purchase a product in the open market…Is there anything that suggests Congress can do this?”

So far, three federal district judges have upheld the ACA while two have ruled it is unconstitutional.  Three cases were heard by appeals courts, with a fourth appellate panel planning to hold a hearing in September.  The current case has attracted the most attention because it involves 26 state attorneys general who jointly challenged the law.  Additionally the Atlanta-based 11th Circuit is considered one of the nation’s most conservative federal appellate courts.

If any appeals courts declare the law unconstitutional, the case likely would be heard by the Supreme Court — perhaps during the election year.  Legal experts believe the 11th Circuit is more likely to rule against the administration.

The hearing was a government appeal of a decision by Florida-based U.S. District Judge Roger Vinson that ruled against the insurance mandate and voided the healthcare law.  According to Vinson, the mandate exceeded Congress’ power to regulate commerce because, instead of involving the usual “economic activity,” it targeted “inactivity,” in other words, someone’s decision not to purchase insurance.  This case is high profile because it was brought by more than half of the states; additionally, it tests an unprecedented lower-court ruling that invalidated the entire law.

One of the appellate judges asked Katyal if there are there any limits on Congress’s power to compel people to act. “Absolutely,” Katyal replied.  “We are not saying that Congress can force somebody to buy something and that failure to do so is economic activity.  People are seeking that good already,” he said.  Katyal said $43 billion is spent annually on care for the uninsured.  “That’s quintessentially economic,” he said.  Clement argued that the crux of the issue is whether the federal government can regulate individuals.  “For 220 years, Congress never saw fit to exercise that power,” he said.  “The whole reason we do this is to protect individual liberty.”  According to Clement, the Commerce Clause regulates people engaged in commercial activity and does not force them to engage.

Writing in The New Republic, Jonathan Cohn is reluctant to say how he thinks the court will rule.  “I didn’t hear the entire oral argument, which C-Span helpfully broadcast.  (Note to the federal judiciary: There’s this thing called the internet and it can transmit audio files.)  But I, too, came away genuinely uncertain how the court will rule.  The judges seemed a lot more ornery during the questioning of Katyal than they did during the questioning of Paul Clement, the former solicitor general arguing on behalf of the states filing the lawsuit.  But the actual substance of those questions – and some side comments that the judges made – suggested they were ready to reject essential pieces of the legal challenge.  Particularly striking were a series of comments from Frank Hull, in which she (yes, Frank is a ‘she’) stated repeatedly that she did not agree with the ‘activity-inactivity’ distinction opponents of the law have made.  As those of you following this case know, that’s really the heart of their argument:  They say the decision not to buy insurance is a form of ‘inactivity,’ which means the government may not regulate it.  Supporters of the law, including the government, disagree.  And Hull seemed to side with them, saying (roughly, given my sketchy notes):  ‘When I decide I would rather spend my money differently…that I would rather buy this product than pay for health insurance…that’s an economic decision…How can that be anything other than an economic decision?’”

ER Usage Study Shows Interesting Results

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Study has unexpected results on just who uses the emergency room the most.  Twenty percent of Americans visited a hospital emergency room in 2007, the most recent year for which the National Center for Health Statistics has data.  That includes approximately 7.4 percent of the uninsured who visited the ER multiple times, as did 5.1 percent of people with private insurance.  The most frequent ER visitors were Medicaid patients, with 15.3 percent reporting two or more visits in 2007.  A total of 116.8 million ER visits were made that year.

One third of adults in fair or poor health visited the ER at least once during the year and are the patients most likely to use that facility.  Patients over 65 reported more ER visits and described it as their customary source of healthcare.  Approximately 25 percent of individuals aged 75 and older visited the ER at least once in 2007.

The big surprise?  Contrary to conventional wisdom, the uninsured were not more likely to make non-emergency visits to the ER than other groups.  Approximately 10 percent fall into the non-emergency category whether the patient had private insurance, Medicaid coverage or no insurance.  Determining who visits the ER, the frequency and for what reasons requires examining complicated interactions among multiple factors – socioeconomic level, overall health, age, health insurance, access to healthcare and others.

“Our job is to provide the best numbers to inform policy and practice,” said Amy B. Bernstein of the National Center for Health Statistics.  “If people are concerned about the use of emergency rooms and how to make their use more efficient or effective, they should have accurate information about who is actually using them – and not who they think is using them.”