ED Physicians Sound Alarm on Overcrowding
Emergency physicians have sounded another warning cry about overcrowding following results from a March survey showing that 80% of their departments have seen increases in visits in the last year.
The results refute the prevailing but incorrect assumption that when more people have insurance, emergency room visits will go down when in fact, they will more than likely go up, says Sandra Schneider, MD, president of the American College of Emergency Physicians.
Nearly all the doctors responding to the ACEP survey reported that every day, they see Medicaid patients who come to their EDs because they could not find a doctor who would accept their health coverage.
If the healthcare reform bill pays for this population at Medicaid rates, this problem will only be exacerbated, Schneider said.
"This poll confirms what we are witnessing in Massachusetts – that visits to emergency rooms are going to increase across the country, despite healthcare reform, and that health insurance coverage does not guarantee access to medical care," Schneider said.
She is referring to a program enacted in 2006 to provide coverage to the bulk of that state's residents. Instead of reducing crowding, visits to emergency departments went up, according to statistics released by the state.
"Emergency medicine provides lifesaving and critical care to millions of patients each year and yet only represents 2% of the nation's healthcare expenditures."
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