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ER use shoots up among insured patients

Nurse Walter Davis checks on a patient in the emergency room at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle.
Nurse Walter Davis checks on a patient in the emergency room at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle.

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HEALTH LIBRARY
Mayo Clinic

NEW YORK (AP) -- People with insurance are increasingly using emergency rooms, even for non-urgent care, a study found -- perplexing experts who thought the uninsured were the chief reason for ER overcrowding.

Emergency room visits jumped to an average of 107.7 million a year in 2001 and 2000, up 16.3 percent from 1996 and 1997. Most of the increase came from insured patients, according to the Center for Studying Health System Change, a Washington think tank.

Privately insured patients' use of the emergency room rose 24.3 percent to 43.3 million visits over that six-year period. People covered by Medicare, the government insurance for the elderly, visited the ER 16 million times, a 10 percent increase. Visits by uninsured patients rose 10.3 percent to 18 million, while those by patients covered by Medicaid, the government program for the poor, were flat at 18.4 million.

Only 46 percent of the ER visits by privately insured patients were considered either emergent -- requiring care within 15 minutes of arrival -- or urgent -- requiring care within an hour of arrival.

"The results were surprising," said Peter Cunningham, a senior health researcher at the Center for Studying Health System Change, who conducted the study using data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as well his organization's own information.

"Uninsured people clearly are not a major factor in increased crowding at most hospital emergency departments, but uninsured people's growing reliance on emergency care indicates decreased access to other sources of care."

The American Hospital Association says 67 percent of emergency rooms are either at or over capacity. At inner-city hospitals, that number jumps to 80 percent.

More flexibility

Some experts speculate that more patients are turning to the ER because doctor's offices do not accommodate people's working schedules. Emergency rooms are open 24 hours a day and no appointments are necessary.

The study cited other research showing that patients are having difficulty making appointments with their doctors, and having to wait longer for appointments. Some doctors are closing their practices to new patients.

And some people may go to the emergency room believing they have a true medical emergency, even though it turns out be a minor problem,

"Sometimes people think they are having a heart attack and it is only bad indigestion," said Carmela Coyle, senior vice president for policy at the American Hospital Association.

Experts say the trend will only add to rising health care costs because treating someone in a hospital is more expensive than tending to them in a doctor's office.

Dr. Joseph Guarisco, chairman of emergency medicine at the Ochsner Clinic Foundation in New Orleans, said his hospital has been seeing more insured patients in the ER for the past five years.

He believes a big reason is convenience. Visiting the emergency room may not be prohibitively expensive for an insured patient -- a copayment of $50 to $100 for a visit, rather than $10 to $20 for an office visit. But a patient can see a doctor, have some tests and consult with the doctor again when the results come in all in one visit, instead of three separate appointments.

That option is especially appealing for those who do not want to take time off from work to see a doctor, Guarisco said.

"Patients want service on demand. They don't want to wait around for an appointment for something that can be painful," he said.

He added that it is probably much more common for suburban patients to visit the ER for non-critical care than for urban patients because emergency rooms in inner cities are more crowded and have longer waits.

The study found that the proportion of emergency room patients who waited more than 30 minutes increased from 36 percent in 1999 to 45 percent in 2001, while those waiting 15 minutes or less decreased from 42 percent to 33 percent.



Copyright 2003 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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