ERs Under Stress

Many Emergency Rooms are Operating At or Over Capacity

California’s hospital emergency rooms (ERs) see everyone who enters their doors, regardless of the health issue or one's ability to pay for services. In the last decade California has lost more than 70 community hospitals and emergency rooms. The remaining ERs are under ever-increasing pressure to care for a growing number of patients.

California’s Emergency Rooms – There for You When You Need Them Most

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Sacramento Business Journal supplement, September 2010

Hospital emergency rooms (ERs) are there for you and your family when you need them most. We’re there 24 hours a day, seven days a week to care for every man, woman and child who enters our doors. Last year, California’s hospital emergency rooms cared for 11 million people with a variety of health conditions, including patients with severe chest pains, broken bones, those infected with the H1N1 flu virus, and children with high fevers and persistent coughs in the middle of the night.

Headed to ER? Some Post Waits by Text, Billboard

San Francisco Chronicle, August 24, 2010

Need an X-ray or stitches? Online, via text message or flashing on a billboard, some emergency rooms are advertising how long the dreaded wait for care will be, with estimates updated every few minutes. 

Who Visits the Emergency Room? 20 Percent of Americans, Insured or Not

New York Times, August 16, 2010

Americans, insured and not, make ample use of hospital emergency rooms: One out of every five visited an E.R. at least once in 2007, the latest year for which the National Center for Health Statistics has data.

Emergency Department Visits Up 23% in 10 Years

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HealthLeaders Media, August 10, 2010

There were nearly 117 million patient visits to the nation's emergency departments in 2007, a 23% increase over a decade, or 39.4 visits per 100 persons, according to a federal National Health Statistics Reports review.

More Medicaid Patients Using ERs, Study Finds

Bloomberg Businessweek, August, 11, 2010

UCSF researchers found that ERs are increasingly serving as "safety nets" for basic health care services. Adults on Medi-Cal (Medicaid) visited ERs 5 times more often than adults with private insurance, creating longer wait times for everyone.

Longer Waits For Emergency Care Coming, Physicians Say

HealthLeaders Media, July 26, 2010

A report detailing record-long waits at the nation's emergency departments comes as no surprise to emergency physicians, who say waits will lengthen as health coverage expands, emergency departments close, and hospitals fail to improve admitting processes.

Are More Emergency Department Patients Really a Problem?

ER Forum, July 30, 2010

While the focus regarding health care reform has been on the complexity, cost, and political posturing, one issue hasn’t gotten nearly enough coverage. It’s the very real question of whether health care reform will increase ED patient volumes across the country

Health Overhaul May Mean Longer ER Waits, Crowding

USA Today, July 2010

Emergency rooms, the only choice for patients who can't find care elsewhere, may grow even more crowded with longer wait times under the nation's new health law.

Health Overhaul May Mean Longer ER Waits, Crowding

Associated Press, July 2, 2010

CHICAGO — Emergency rooms, the only choice for patients who can't find care elsewhere, may grow even more crowded with longer wait times under the nation's new health law.

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