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Emergency Department Utilization: Facts and Myths Lynne D. Richardson, M.D., F.A.C.E.P. Vice Chair and Associate Professor Department of Emergency Medicine Mount Sinai School of Medicine August 26, 2009
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THE FACTS l Emergency Department Utilization –Who? –Why? l Emergency Department Crowding –What? –Why?
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MYTH #1: “Increasing penetration of managed care will decrease the use of emergency departments.”
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Annual U.S. ED Visits & EDs 1995 – 2006 (NHAMCS) 2006
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The Emergency Department: A Unique Care Provider l Immediate care available 24 hours/day; 7 days/week l Complex life-saving interventions – simple first aid l access, regardless of ability to pay, mandated by federal law (EMTALA) l only available access to care for many vulnerable and disenfranchised individuals
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The Emergency Department The Ultimate “Safety Net” Provider ED disproportionately used by: l patients without insurance l patients with Medicaid l patients without primary care physicians l members of racial and ethnic minorities l other “vulnerable populations”
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MYTH #2 “Emergency departments are used mainly by patients who have nowhere else to go: uninsured, illegal immigrants, homeless, etc, etc.”
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ED Visit Rates by Payment Source (NHAMCS 2006)
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ED Visits by Payment Source (NHAMCS 2006)
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U.S. Hospital Admissions by Route (NHAMCS 1996, 2006)
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U.S. ED Visit Rates by patient age, race & ethnicity: 2005 (NHAMCS)
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MYTH #3 “There is frequent misuse or inappropriate use of the ED for non-urgent problems”
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ED Patient Acuity ( ED Patient Acuity (NHAMCS 2006)
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EMPATH: Emergency Medicine Patients’ Access to Healthcare Principal Reasons for Coming to the ED l Medical Necessity l ED Preference l Convenience l Affordability l Limitations of Insurance Ragin et al, Acad Emerg Med 2005
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EMPATH Study: Conclusions Use of the ED is driven by: l comprehensive scope of services l Immediate availability of services l quality of care provided l lack of affordable alternatives
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Emergency Department CROWDING l Definitions & Measures l Causes of Crowding l Impact on patient outcomes l Short term strategies l Long term solutions
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ED Crowding: Asplin’s Model
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ED Crowding: “Upstream” (INPUT) Issues l Inadequate primary care capacity l Insufficient “walk in” & off hours availability of PCPs l Increasing number of uninsured l Declining Medicaid enrollment l Declining coverage for immigrants l Less funding for uncompensated care
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ED Crowding: THROUGHPUT issues l Increasing acuity l Increasing volume l Staff shortages: particularly nurses l Operational inefficiencies: –Registration –Laboratory –Radiology –Consults
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ED Crowding: OUTPUT Issues Boarding of admitted patients l Decreasing hospital bed capacity l Institutional / organizational culture l Declining reimbursement l Shrinking hospital profit margins Decreased primary care capacity Insufficient access to specialty care
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ED Boarding of Admitted Patients l Often cited as #1 cause of ED Crowding* l 62.5% hospitals board admitted patients** –14.9% “board” on inpatient units –35.6% observation/clinical decision unit –35.2% electronic dashboard –21.1% full capacity protocol l 19.5 % expanded ED within past 2 years l 31.5% have ED expansion plans *GAO Report; ACEP Task Force; **NHAMCS 2007 E-Stat
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Adverse Impact on Outcomes l Increased waiting times l Increases in leaving without treatment or AMA l Increased risk of in-hospital mortality l Increased time to antibiotics for pneumonia l Reduced promptness & quality of pain management
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“ Knowing is not enough, we must apply. Willing is not enough, we must do.” Goethe
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RWJF Urgent Matters Program l National program to develop solutions to ED Crowding l Elmhurst Hospital one of ten sites l Results released May/June 2004 summary available at http://www.urgentmatters.org
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Institute of Medicine Report on Institute of Medicine Report on Future of Emergency Care in the United States l Key Findings & Recommendations –released June 2006 l Hospital-Based ED Care l Emergency Care for Children l Pre-hospital Emergency Care
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IOM Future of Emergency Care Recommendations l Improve hospital efficiency & patient flow l A coordinated, regionalized, accountable EMS system l Increased reimbursement l Increased resources for research & disaster preparedness l Focused attention to care of children
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Williams, R. NEJM, 1996. –ED: High fixed costs; low marginal costs –True costs of non-urgent care in the ED are relatively low Tyrance, P. AJPH, 1996 –Only 12% of “ED spending” by uninsured –ED expenditures only 1.9% of US health costs –Decreasing ED use will not generate much overall US health cost savings Cost of Care in the ED
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