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The use of the ER for everything and anything is essentially a part of american culture now.
As long as the we remain the fastest and most convenient way to see a doctor people will continue to come in ever increasing numbers.
This.
And still not fast enough. I just reviewed our PG surveys, and had a pt gives scores on 1 because '30 min is just too long for my toothache' and we didn't have a good enough variety of sandwiches. Single review, but really a cross cut of current sentiment - we are a victim of our own success to some degree.
These people should be found and *educated*.
How amazing would it be if ABEM used a little part of our fees to them to run a series of ads like the Aussies?
These people should be found and *educated*.
How amazing would it be if ABEM used a little part of our fees to them to run a series of ads like the Aussies?
How amazing would it be if ABEM used a little part of our fees to them to run a series of ads like the Aussies?
Well, if the government were paying for it, they would. Remember, the government pays for the lines at the post office and the DMV. ABEM, ACEP, and AAEM all depend on people going to ERs. Hospitals don't actively want anyone turned away for the same reason. It makes money. The places that close are the ones that get Medicaid patients, which doesn't pay enough to keep the lights on.
Oh I do get it. ACEP would be the last group to do this and probably never ABEM from a dollars and sense perspective. I do wonder though when the monetary and personal costs of burnout/doctors going insane from unrealistic pt expectations will exceed the $ collected from the 12th well appearing pt w/uri while they complain about their hour wait and lack of ESPN in their room after you just coded a now-deceased kid.
It is the damn administrators who need to be *educated*.These people should be found and *educated*.
I see the ED as an extension of the expectations brought by a capitalist society. People want what they want when they want it, which is RIGHT NOW.
For real. People all over need to get a grip. Anyone else remember the lady that called 911 because McDonald's was out of chicken nuggets?
From the audio clip: "My McNuggets ARE an emergency!"
It's not capitalism. Capitalism would sort out the problems of supply and demand just as it does everything else. Arguably most medical care is anti-capitalistic because the users are separated from the costs, and have no incentive to curb their usage. The system could very easily be fixed by demanding a co-pay from everyone (after they've had an MSE) including medicaid and medicare patients. I will take a quick history, do any necessary exam, and then if it's not an emergency, you get no treatment or instructions from me unless you pay up.
I don't see how capitalism works in your example. Eventually people would get wise to the MSE and start saying they have CP, feign belly pain, etc so they can stay for a bit and work in their true CC an underhanded way. I think until you add in some state/federal legal protections for EPs (along with changing the way people pay for their care) nothing will change to allow us to do more MSEs than we do now.
Technically pure capitalism isn't to blame given many of the backwards regulations in healthcare that prevent a true free market. But the capitalistic features of our current system have given us some terrible gifts like Envision, Team, USACS, HCA, United, Antham, etc. It's also resulted in an incalculable amount of lame start-ups entering "the healthcare space" that put on a good show for investors and whose prime directive is to get bought up by a bigger fish rather than forging something that's actually useful. Along the way our costs get higher, our outcomes remain unremarkable, and our work environment worsens.
The system could very easily be fixed by demanding a co-pay from everyone (after they've had an MSE) including medicaid and medicare patients. I will take a quick history, do any necessary exam, and then if it's not an emergency, you get no treatment or instructions from me unless you pay up.
👍👍👍👍For $25 you get a differential diagnosis.
For $75 more you get an actual diagnosis (not including the cost of diagnostic tests).
For $150 more you get a treatment plan (not including the cost of treatment).
Bundle it all for $225 -- that's $25 in savings.
Act now and we'll include a work note (a $30 value) for free!
25-35% of my patients on any given day were "sent in by their____(PMD, Urgent Care, Surgeon, Cardiologist). A few of these are legit but many are complete punts. I had a young patient with some vague chest tightness sent in from urgent care last week with an EKG that some PA had written "r/o ACS, inverted T waves in V1, with a helpful circle around the offending T wave".
Even better are the ones sent in by their PMD or past surgeon for evaluation of some problem who tell me "you must call Dr XXXX immediately, he is very concerned and wants to be kept in the loop". Of course when I call said Dr to discuss the patients and see what their expectations were they say "I have no idea, he/she is crazy, just admit them to the medical service to get worked up...or discharge them home....or do whatever you want, they're fine".
Not sure if this happens everywhere, I think in some places its an insurance thing, easier to bill from an admission through the ED...in others the MD doesn't want to deal with doing paperwork, orders, etc so they just scut out the ED...or even worse they don't want to expend the mental energy and would rather we make the diagnosis and admit for them to bill for the inpatient treatment. Either way I think there are a lot of ways we could cut these visits down
.. visits are up ****particularly in states with expanded medicaid.****