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http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2010-06-01-emsredirect01_ST_N.htm?csp=34news
I'm surprised yet not so surprised that this hasn't been used more widely in the US given the malpractice and blame-game climate. Would putting a physician on the line help weed out even more non-emergent visits? I'm sure it will, but is it feasible? Anybody know if it's ever been tried with an doc on the line?
How about if the nurse/doc was not saying whether you need to visit the ED or not, but simply ruled if you really needed an ambulance, kinda like we reserve HEMS just for certain cases...could we start screening out $1000 ambulance rides and tell people to just take a $10 cab.
By Jessie Halladay, USA TODAY
Hoping to ease crowded emergency rooms and trim ambulance runs, Louisville Metro Emergency Medical Services (EMS) has launched a program that aims to screen low-priority calls and divert patients from hospitals into more appropriate health care.
Under the program, which started April 19, a small number of the lowest priority calls — such as those for an earache or a stomachache — are being turned over to a nurse who is able to spend time with the patient on the phone to figure out appropriate treatment, which may not include a trip to an emergency room in an ambulance.
"We're trying to challenge the way things are traditionally done," says Neal Richmond, an emergency room physician and Louisville Metro EMS director. "Let's find these people better care."
'The time is here for this'
The program, which is among the first of its kind in the nation, is widely used in the United Kingdom and Australia, says Jeff Clawson, medical director for the National Academies of Emergency Dispatch.
Though a handful of cities have explored similar programs, only Louisville and Richmond, Va., which piloted the program, are fully using it in EMS systems, he says.
Clawson says that if the system is used carefully, it can be a powerful way to "preserve precious resources" while still getting patients the care they need. "The time is here for this."
Most patients calling 911 won't notice much of a difference, because all calls will continue to be screened through the automated protocol system already in place, says Kristen Miller, chief of staff for Louisville Metro EMS. On average, the Louisville system handles about 230 to 250 calls a day, she says.
I'm surprised yet not so surprised that this hasn't been used more widely in the US given the malpractice and blame-game climate. Would putting a physician on the line help weed out even more non-emergent visits? I'm sure it will, but is it feasible? Anybody know if it's ever been tried with an doc on the line?
How about if the nurse/doc was not saying whether you need to visit the ED or not, but simply ruled if you really needed an ambulance, kinda like we reserve HEMS just for certain cases...could we start screening out $1000 ambulance rides and tell people to just take a $10 cab.