EDs Can't Sustain Care in Current Economic Environment
A recent federal report casts more concern that hospital emergency rooms are having increasing difficulty treating all comers, especially because federal payments and the uninsured don't pay their full cost of care.
"There is a growing concern that EDs will not be able to sustain care for all persons in the current economic environment," according to the report, entitled "Payers of Emergency Department Care, 2006," that was published by the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
"Between 1993 and 2003, there was a 23% increase in ED visits and a closure of 425 hospital EDs. In addition, a recent Institute of Medicine report notes that EDs have become increasingly overcrowded, overburdened, and underfunded. Yet little is known about who is paying for ED care, what the charges are for the care, and how to potentially relieve this pressure," the report said.
Of all visits to hospital emergency departments in 2006, 41.8% of the care was billed to the federal government–21.6% to Medicaid and 20.2% to Medicare. Another 17.7% were uninsured. An estimated 34.6% was billed to private insurance, and the rest to other private payers.
But those with no insurance were less likely to have medical problems so serious that their trip to the emergency room ended with an admission to the hospital, according to the report. Only 6.8% of the 21.2 million visits among the uninsured required an inpatient hospital stay; the rest were treated and released.
The report said the low percentage of patients with no insurance who went home without being admitted is "a possible indication of their use of hospital emergency departments as their usual source of care."
For those covered by Medicare, about 38% of the 24.2 million visits ended up with a hospital admission, compared with 11% of the 41.5 million visits billed to private insurers, and 9.5% of the 26 million visits billed to Medicaid.

- 10 Major Changes to Health Reform in House's Reconciliation Bill
- Ten Ways to Increase Nurses' Time at the Bedside
- Six Reasons Proposed Hospital Advertising Ban Will Never Pass
- Medical Breakthroughs That Will Change Healthcare
- Match Day a Reminder of Primary Care's Struggles
- Hospitals Make Employee Flu Vaccinations a Patient Safety Issue
- Computer-Controlled Pancreas Could Close the Diabetes Loop
- Can 'Deadly Deliveries' Be a Wake-Up Call to Physicians, Hospitals?
- Physicians Generate $1.5M Annually for Their Hospitals, Says Survey
- Hospital Monitors Infectious Diseases Using Real-Time Surveillance
