The emergency department and managed care: A synergistic model

被引:1
|
作者
Fisher, BA [1 ]
机构
[1] Loma Linda Univ, Med Ctr, Loma Linda, CA 92354 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1097/00115514-199807000-00009
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Managed care organizations (MCOs) have recently focused on the high cost of patient visits to the emergency department (ED). MCOs emphasize preventing the access low-acuity patients have to the ED, believing that billions of healthcare dollars will be saved. A review of ED studies, however, suggests a different outcome. Combined with new ED service lines, perhaps another-rather paradoxical-approach to managing healthcare costs in the ED is more patient focused and more cost effective in the long term. This approach is more comprehensive and offers more, rather than fewer, services. The ED is an important community resource and entry port to healthcare. It is the only place open 24 hours per day, seven days per week, with no appointment necessary and all lab and radiology services available. The very claim that it is overutilized is an indication of its success. In large-volume EDs, certain patient populations may be more specifically served with pediatric emergency, industrial medicine, and fast-trade physicians. Special facilities for chest pain patients or for observation enable physicians to treat patients more quickly and to keep them out of hospital beds, thus lowering costs. In smaller hospitals, the well-rounded ED physician can treat patients of all acuities. In the most rural communities, the ED can become the local 24-hour clinic with short-term stay beds. EDs are fixed costs to hospitals. Extracting low-acuity patients from the ED will raise costs for emergency patients and leave the facility underutilized. By appropriately raising prices for emergencies and decreasing low-acuity patient charges to reflect their marginal expense, hospitals can make the ED a cost-friendly environment for the low-acuity patient.
引用
收藏
页码:339 / 355
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Visits to Primary Care and Emergency Department Reliance for Foster Youth: Impact of Medicaid Managed Care
    Bright, Melissa A.
    Kleinman, Lawrence
    Vogel, Bruce
    Shenkman, Elizabeth
    ACADEMIC PEDIATRICS, 2018, 18 (04) : 397 - 404
  • [22] Managed psychiatric care: A suburban medical department activity model
    Shuman, CR
    MILITARY MEDICINE, 1996, 161 (09) : 557 - 561
  • [23] A model for managed behavioral health care in an academic department of psychiatry
    Fagan, PJ
    Schmidt, CW
    Cook, B
    PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES, 2002, 53 (04) : 431 - 436
  • [24] MEDICAID MANAGED CARE AND EMERGENCY CARE
    BENJAMIN, GC
    TALIAFERRO, EH
    BEDARD, L
    KENNAN, SA
    ANNALS OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 1993, 22 (11) : 1746 - 1748
  • [25] Quality Of Care For Adults With Acute Asthma Managed In The Emergency Department: Findings From The Illinois Emergency Department Asthma Surveillance Project (IEDASPL)
    Stein, B. D.
    Catrambone, C. D.
    Thompson, N.
    Fogg, L. F.
    McDermott, M. F.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2011, 183
  • [26] The impact of managed care enrollment on emergency department use among children with special health care needs
    Pollack, Harold A.
    Wheeler, John R. C.
    Cowan, Anne
    Freed, Gary L.
    MEDICAL CARE, 2007, 45 (02) : 139 - 145
  • [27] Association between primary care practice characteristics and emergency department use in a medicaid managed care organization
    Lowe, RA
    Localio, AR
    Schwarz, DF
    Williams, S
    Tuton, LW
    Maroney, S
    Nicklin, D
    Goldfarb, N
    Vojta, DD
    Feldman, HI
    MEDICAL CARE, 2005, 43 (08) : 792 - 800
  • [28] ONCOLOGY EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT: A NURSE PRACTITIONER CARE MODEL
    Beck, Barbara
    JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY NURSING, 2017, 43 (06) : 575 - 577
  • [29] Frequency and Cost of Emergency Department Visits among Migraineurs in a US Managed Care Population
    Golden, W. M.
    Christensen, L.
    Hu, X. H.
    Bigal, M. E.
    Chen, Y. -T.
    HEADACHE, 2010, 50 : S29 - S30
  • [30] Outpatient treatment of deep venous thrombosis: A clinical care pathway managed by the emergency department
    Vinson, DR
    Berman, DA
    ANNALS OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2001, 37 (03) : 251 - 258