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Popular Topics
EDs seeing more affluent patients, less uninsured
Here's a study that flies in the face of what we've been reading elsewhere. According to new research published in the Annals of Emergency Medicine, emergency departments are actually seeing a growing percentage of affluent patients, while the number of uninsured patients is falling. Researchers found that uninsured patients accounted for 15.5 percent of visits in 1996-97, but only 14.5 percent of visits in 2003-04. Meanwhile, the number of visits by higher-earning people with incomes of more than 400 percent of the poverty level grew from 21.9 percent to 29 percent during the comparable period. Wow. That is a stunning reversal from the conventional wisdom. So, if the uninsured aren't the biggest cash drain on EDs, what's really going on?
To learn more from the study:
- read this Modern Healthcare piece (reg. req.)
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Hospitals charge fee for non-emergency ED visits. ED report
CMS faces ED overcrowding scrutiny. ED report
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Comments
This article talks in percentages... quit talking in percentages and look at the real volume... since ED volumes have increased significantly between the two timeperiods that you studied. I suggest looking at real #'s of uninsured, compared to previous period. That's why EP's and ED's are still feeling it.
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