Average ER Wait Time Increases To 1 Hour
In Last Ten Years Time Has Increased 32 Percent Because Of More Visits To Emergency Room
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The increase is due to supply and demand, said Dr. Stephen Pitts, the lead author of the report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
"There are more people arriving at the ERs. And there are fewer ERs," said Pitts, an associate professor of emergency medicine at Atlanta's Emory University.
Overall, about 119 million visits were made to U.S. emergency rooms in 2006, up from 90 million in 1996 - a 32 percent increase.
Meanwhile, the number of hospital emergency departments dropped to fewer than 4,600, from nearly 4,900, according to American Hospital Association statistics.
Another reason for crowding is patients who are admitted to the hospital end up waiting in the ER because of the limited number of hospital beds, Pitts added.
A shortage of surgical specialists also contributes. So, too, does the difficulty many patients have in getting appointments to doctor's offices - which causes some to turn to emergency departments, experts said.
"It takes me a month to get an appointment for my own doctor, and I'm a physician, for God's sake," said Dr. Ricardo Martinez, an Atlanta trauma physician. He is executive vice president of Schumacher Group, an organization that manages about 140 hospital emergency departments.
The amount of time a patient waited before seeing a physician in an ER has been rising steadily, from 38 minutes in 1997, to 47 minutes in 2004, to 56 minutes in 2006.
Pitts added that 56 minutes may be the average, but it's not typical: The average was skewed to nearly an hour because of some very long waits.
"Half of people had waiting times of 31 minutes or less," Pitts noted.
Researchers also found that there has not been any recent increases in the number of patients arriving by ambulance, or in the number of cases considered to be true emergencies.
Black patients visited emergency departments at twice the rate as whites in 2006. Among age groups, the highest visitation rates were for infants and elderly people aged 75 and older.
About 40 percent of ER patients had private insurance, about 25 percent were covered by state programs for children and about 17 percent were covered by Medicare, the report found. About 17 percent were uninsured.
Some more findings: Summer and winter were the busiest season in ERs, and the early evening - around 7 p.m. - tended to be the busiest time of day. There were geographic differences as well, with hospitals in the South having the highest ER visitation rates.
Also, half of hospital admissions in 2006 came through emergency departments, up from 36 percent in 1996.
"The ER has become the front door to the hospital," said Pitts, a fellow at the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics.
Some doctors said the report supports a call for increased governmental funding for hospital emergency services.
"Millions more people each year are seeking emergency care, but emergency departments are continuing to close, often because so much care goes uncompensated," Dr. Linda Lawrence, president of the American College of Emergency Physicians, said in a statement.
"This report is very troubling, because it shows that care is being delayed for everyone, including people in pain and with heart attacks," her statement added.
The results are based on a national survey of 362 hospital emergency departments.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



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Yeah! Its not like we are all human or anything. The hell with those lazy parsite illegal immigrants. Let them all be turned away! Die! How dare you have been born in another country! We know you chose to be born in the ghetto of Mexico. Mwahahahah! ....PS that was sarcasm.
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Here we are back to my point that we are all human. Neither one is more important.
As far as cutting Doctors pay.. NO..
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Posted by SistaTee
And how exactly will that help the situation? If you cut pay to doctors, nurses, etc., fewer people will want to go into the medical professions, thereby making the situation even worse.
Ok,so for the routine stuff, folks can go to the local retail clinic staffed by nurse practitioners and be seen on a walk-in basis in about 10 to 15 minutes tops.
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So for a walk in pay clinic my son paid $50 and up depending on his in come. Wait time was 1hr
When we took my baby daughter to a free clinic (we actually paid $100.00) that wait was 2 hrs.
We are now covered by my job. Wait time 15 min.
We pay $15.00 each visit but out of check its is $100 a month.
universal health care with long waiting line, foret it.
When we took my baby daughter to a free clinic (we actually paid $100.00) that wait was 2 hrs.
We are now covered by my job. Wait time 15 min.
We pay $15.00 each visit but out of check its is $100 a month.
universal health care with long waiting line, foret it.
Posted by PapaBC at 05:50 PM : Aug 06, 2008
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PapaBC,
Retail clinics are not your typical walk-in clinic.
They are a new program in chain pharmacies where there is a clinic staff by nurse practitioners.
There is a basic list of conditions treated. Walgreens, CVS & Walmart are all putting these NP clinics in their stores.
My point was if the routine stuff(colds, vaccinations, tests, etc) could be done in a retail clinic, then there would be less pressure on doctors, ERs, and even traditional walk-in clinics.
Welcome to America!
Now sreww off and die! (Your bill will be sent to your next of kin).
As one of many examples are greedy business owners such as the Hasidic Jews who moved from Brooklyn to Postville, IA and bought Agriprocessors Kosher foods, and then imported thousands of illegal immigrants for cheap labor.
The government charges the employees but not the Rubashkin''s who hire them.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postville
interesting but not surprising. It''s all about the money.
Posted by OhOhOh1 at 04:52 PM : Aug 06, 2008
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I have asked Canadians, they wouldn''t trade thier system for ours. Long waits in Canada occour but are mostly media hype. Canadians I have talked to would rather enjoy thier free health care than risk finical ruin and outragious insurance cost with our system. Americians stupidly always argue the "long wait in Canada". Why do they think universal health care in the US would be exactly like Canada''s? We could provide better service and spend double per capita what Canada does and still save billions.
Posted by standlee5 at 01:38 AM : Aug 07, 2008
This is simply rediculous!! We have the wait times because people can not nor do not get preventative care or they have no coverage to get medical treatment other than the ER. I this area we have VERY few if any illegals and you can''t get in the ER on most days, let alone get treated. The system is broken people and it''s time to actually DO something besides make stupid empty promises.
Peace
Posted by dinkydog1 at 07:45 AM : Aug 07, 2008
Not really. I''m a dual citizen with experience with both the Canadian and U.S. health care systems. Let me give you an example. My mother-in-law is now in the midst of waiting about a month for an MRI of her shoulder here in Canada. When I needed an MRI of my shoulder a few years ago in the States I got in the next day. There are longer waits in Canada and some wealthier Canadians are flocking to the States and paying for faster health care. Longer wait times and rationing are unfortunately a by-product of the Canadian socialist healthcare system.
Posted by rational_1 at 11:26 AM : Aug 07, 2008
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Long waits although greatly exagerated are more likley due to the fact that Canadians spend only a fraction per capita of what Americans do and not "socialism".
There are several problems, including not enough doctors who will go to the hospital at night (so much for duty and compassion.)The hospitals won''t pay them for calls and so many of the patients are uninsured.
The answer to the problem is the old story of supply and demand. We need more doctors. And the only solution is more medical schools, and the only source left for the money is good old Uncle Sam. Lets take some of the money that we are wasting in Iraq, Afganistan, and other sink holes and build up our educational institutions and infrastructures.
6:00 p.m., and it was now way after midnight.
My understanding is that we only have one doctor in emerg.
Don''t complain about your one hour wait time - it''s a drop in the bucket.
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by eggy1620
August 8, 2008 6:22 PM EDT
- The lesson here is do not go to the ER. Go to an urgent care center. If you want to be seen quickly in an ER, then call an ambulance. If your condition is not life threatening, it can wait until an urgent care center is open.
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