3 in 4 ED Managers Report Shortage of Specialists
Emergency department directors are reporting inadequate on-call trauma coverage, and many report a loss or downgrade of their hospitals' trauma center designations, according to a survey in the journal Academic Emergency Medicine.
"Without adequate on-call surgical coverage, our healthcare system cannot provide for emergency and trauma patients," said Mitesh Rao, MD, lead author of the survey and study: The Shortage of On-Call Surgical Specialist Coverage: A National Survey of Emergency Department Directors.
Rao, with the department of emergency medicine at Yale University, and clinical scholar with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, said 21% of ED deaths and permanent injury can be linked to shortages of specialty physician care. "Transferring patients significant distances to an available specialist is sometimes the only option, but it can create a dangerous delay in care," he said.
The survey found that 60% of respondents could no longer provide 24-hour coverage for at least one medical specialty in the last four years. More than three-quarters of respondents reported that their EDs have inadequate coverage for plastic surgery, hand surgery and neurosurgery. Almost one-quarter of survey respondents reported an increase in patients leaving before being seen by a specialist.
- Primary Care Docs Average More Hospital Revenue Than Specialists
- 69% of Employers Plan to Offer Healthcare Coverage After 2014
- Building a Better Healthcare Board
- Q&A: Catholic Health Initiatives' New Senior VP for Capital Finance
- CMS Seeks to 'Rapidly Reduce' Medicare Spending with $1B in Grants
- Quiet ORs Better for Patient Safety
- CMS Releases Hospital Pricing Data
- Evidence-Based Practice and Nursing Research: Avoiding Confusion
- Hospital Pricing Data Dump Won't Hurt You, Yet
- Telemedicine is Retail Health Clinics' Newest Tool
