Emergency rooms provide acute care treatments.
Law
The Emergency Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA) requires hospitals and paramedic ambulance transportation companies to provide acute care emergency treatment to patients, regardless of their immigration status or ability to pay. This law was enacted in 1986 to combat refusal of treatment and dumping, discharging or transferring of uninsured or Medicaid patients prior to rendering appropriate stabilizing treatments. This was a practice becoming increasingly common. EMTALA remains controversial, since it is an unfunded federal mandate, which places additional burdens on already overstretched acute care facilities.
Useage
According to the
Most Common Reasons
The 2006 survey by National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care cited the most common reasons for emergency and acute care diagnosis and treatment were chest pain, stomach pain, head pain, fevers, accidents and injuries.
Future
Acute care visits are increasing annually and causing severe overcrowding. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is considering the future of acute care services and has come up with recommendations to improve efficiency and relieve current stresses on services. These recommendations include: adoption of comprehensive information and communications systems and technologies; reimbursement for uncompensated care; improved conditions of service for professional service providers; and improved emergency preparedness.
Tags: acute care, diagnosis treatment, emergency rooms, 2006 survey, 2006 survey National