Threats to the health care safety net

被引:49
|
作者
Taylor, TB [1 ]
机构
[1] Arizona Coll Emergency Phys, Dept Publ Affairs, Phoenix, AZ USA
关键词
crowding; emergency department; safety net; funding; economics;
D O I
10.1111/j.1553-2712.2001.tb01119.x
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
The American health care safety net is threatened due to inadequate funding in the face of increasing demand for services by virtually every segment of our society. The safety net is vital to public safety because it is the sole provider for first-line emergency care, as well as for routine health care of last resort, through hospital emergency departments (ED), emergency medical services providers (EMS), and public/free clinics. Despite the perceived complexity, the causes and solutions for the current crisis reside in simple economics. During the last two decades health care funding has radically changed, yet the fundamental infrastructure of the safety net has change little. In 1986, the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act established federally mandated safety net care that inadvertently encouraged reliance on hospital EDs as the principal safety net resource. At the same time, decreasing health care funding from both private and public sources resulted in declining availability of services necessary to support this shift in demand, including hospital inpatient beds, EDs, EMS providers, on-call specialists, hospital-based nurses, and public hospitals/clinics. The result has been ED/hospital crowding and resource shortages that at times limit the ability to provide even true emergency care and threaten the ability of the traditional safety net to protect public health and safety. This paper explores the composition of the American health care safety net, the root causes for its disintegration, and offers short- and long-term solutions. The solutions discussed include restructuring of disproportionate share funding; presumed (deemed) eligibility for Medicaid eligibility; restructuring of funding for emergency care; health care for foreign nationals; the nursing shortage; utilization of a "health care resources commission"; "episodic (periodic)" health care coverage; best practices and health care services coordination; and government and hospital providers' roles. Conclusions: There is a base amount of funding that must be available to the American health care safety net to maintain its infrastructure and provide appropriate growth, research, development, and expansion of services. Fall below this level and the infrastructure will eventually crumble. America must patch the safety net with short-term funding and repair it with long-term health care policy and environmental changes.
引用
收藏
页码:1080 / 1087
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Closing the Health Care Gap in Communities: A Safety Net System Approach
    Gabow, Patricia A.
    ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2016, 91 (10) : 1337 - 1340
  • [42] Emergency care as safety net
    Gordon, JA
    HEALTH AFFAIRS, 2000, 19 (02) : 277 - 277
  • [43] HOWARE MASSACHUSETTS' SAFETY-NET HOSPITALS FARING IN THE POST-HEALTH CARE REFORMERA?: VIEWS OF SAFETY NET CEOS
    Nardell, Maria
    Tan, Galina
    Moore, Andrew
    Inonog, Susan
    Scales, David
    Ravindra, Jyothi
    Cannon, Nihan K.
    Goldman, Anna
    Basu, Gaurab
    McCormick, Danny
    JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2016, 31 : S247 - S248
  • [44] Threats to the health care system - Response
    Mulligan, PK
    CANADIAN FAMILY PHYSICIAN, 1999, 45 : 35 - 35
  • [45] Access to Care After Massachusetts' Health Care Reform: A Safety Net Hospital Patient Survey
    McCormick, Danny
    Sayah, Assaad
    Lokko, Hermione
    Woolhandler, Steffie
    Nardin, Rachel
    JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2012, 27 (11) : 1548 - 1554
  • [46] Access to Care After Massachusetts’ Health Care Reform: A Safety Net Hospital Patient Survey
    Danny McCormick
    Assaad Sayah
    Hermione Lokko
    Steffie Woolhandler
    Rachel Nardin
    Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2012, 27 : 1548 - 1554
  • [47] Social Determinant of Health Screening in a Safety Net Pediatric Primary Care Clinic
    Shekarchi, Amy
    Gantz, Lisa
    Schickedanz, Adam
    PEDIATRICS, 2018, 142
  • [48] Evaluation of the impact of social safety net program on health care utilization in Togo
    Yaovi Tossou
    Health Economics Review, 15 (1)
  • [49] Financing Medicaid: Federalism and the Growth of America's Health Care Safety Net
    Esterling, Kevin
    INTEREST GROUPS & ADVOCACY, 2014, 3 (03): : 326 - 330
  • [50] Using Health IT to Coordinate Care and Improve Quality in Safety-Net Clinics
    Kranz, Ashley M.
    Dalton, Sarah
    Damberg, Cheryl
    Timbie, Justin W.
    JOINT COMMISSION JOURNAL ON QUALITY AND PATIENT SAFETY, 2018, 44 (12): : 731 - 740