Studies reveal rise and fall of ER use

CAL/AAEM News Service calaaem.news.service1 at gmail.com
Thu Oct 23 20:19:12 PDT 2014


 
October 15, 2014
 
Studies reveal rise and fall of ER use
 
 
Fierce Health Payer
 
 
By Jane Antonio 

The idea that Medicaid expansion will wreak havoc on state budgets due to increased hospital use by the previously-uninsured was challenged by results of a recent study by the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research. While rates of hospital and emergency room use rose soon after people enrolled in low-cost, government health plans, utilization of these services dropped off within a year, researchers found. 

The study examined data on 182,000 Californians insured through county-run programs for low-income people between 2011 and 2013.

Researchers found that subjects who previously had the least medical care used hospital emergency rooms at a rate of 600 visits per 1,000 enrollees in the first three months of coverage. But utilization fell sharply in subsequent quarters, plateauing at a rate of 183 visits per 1,000 enrollees by the end of the second year. The overall utilization decline for emergency visits in the study's time period was 69.5 percent, the researchers found, and subjects' hospital admissions fell by 78.5 percent.    

"California's success should set an example for states that are on the fence about expanding Medicaid," study co-author and UCLA professor Gerald F. Kominski, Ph.D., said in the announcement. "It's an investment: Build more infrastructure and care delivery early on, and you can manage chronic care, address unmet healthcare needs and keep cost increases to a manageable level."

But it's hard to know if coverage expansion will permanently lower emergency room use, the Los Angeles Times reported. ER visits have been rising nationwide for the last 20 years and not just because the uninsured have no other treatment options, Renee Y. Hsia, M.D., associate professor of emergency medicine at UC San Francisco, told the LA Times. And the UCLA study didn't find a contemporaneous rise in outpatient care that might be expected if patients were visiting doctors instead of emergency rooms.   

Hsia published a different study recently in the Journal of the American Medical Association that showed children's ER visits in California increased for all insured populations between 2005 and 2010. And the privately-insured group showed one of the fastest growth rates. 

"It kind of refutes the idea that the ACA is going to solve all our problems," Hsia told the LA Times.         

 
 
 
Bryan Sloane
Deputy Editor, CAL/AAEM News Service
 
Brian Potts MD, MBA
Managing Editor, CAL/AAEM News Service

Contact us at: calaaem.news.service1 at gmail.com

For more articles, visit our archives. 

To unsubscribe from this list, visit our mail server.

Copyright (C) 2013. The California Chapter of the American Academy of Emergency Medicine (CAL/AAEM). http://www.calaaem.org. All rights reserved.

CAL/AAEM, a nonprofit professional organization for emergency physicians, operates the CAL/AAEM News Service solely as an educational resource for physicians. Dissemination of an article by CAL/AAEM News Service does not imply endorsement, agreement, or recommendation by CAL/AAEM News Service, CAL/AAEM, or AAEM.

Follow CAL/AAEM on Facebook and Twitter:
 
         
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://maillists.uci.edu/pipermail/calaaem/attachments/20141023/d390ebf9/attachment-0001.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image009.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 19903 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://maillists.uci.edu/pipermail/calaaem/attachments/20141023/d390ebf9/attachment-0004.jpg>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image010.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 941 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://maillists.uci.edu/pipermail/calaaem/attachments/20141023/d390ebf9/attachment-0005.jpg>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image011.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 885 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://maillists.uci.edu/pipermail/calaaem/attachments/20141023/d390ebf9/attachment-0006.jpg>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image012.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 2255 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://maillists.uci.edu/pipermail/calaaem/attachments/20141023/d390ebf9/attachment-0007.jpg>


More information about the CALAAEM mailing list