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By DANIEL YEE : Associated Press Writer
Jun 4, 2003 : 10:02 am ET
ATLANTA -- More people are seeking care in
U.S. hospital emergency departments in the last decade but there are
fewer departments to treat those in need, federal officials said
Wednesday.
Emergency department visits increased by 20
percent in 2001 (107.5 million visits) compared to 1992 (89.8
million visits), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
said.
Yet emergency departments have shrunk by 15
percent during the same time period because of hospital closures,
mergers or lack of profitability, said study author Linda McCaig, a
CDC health scientist.
As a result, more patients have sought help
in the remaining emergency rooms still open. That's resulted in
longer waits for non-urgent care and more ambulances diverted to
other hospitals, McCaig said.
"There are a lot of problems with emergency
department care right now with the overcrowding and ambulance
diversion and concern about quality of care," McCaig said. "It's
important to monitor."
A March report from the federal General
Accounting Office said two-thirds of emergency departments reported
going on diversion at some point during 2001 and nearly 1 in 10
hospitals were on diversion 20 percent of the time.
The increase in U.S. emergency room visits
comes from the country's aging population. Older people have "more
chronic conditions and they visit the emergency department more
often," McCaig said.
Also, frustration with health insurance
policies may be prompting more visits.
"It seems that people may have more trouble
with scheduling appointments with a primary care provider in a
timely fashion," McCaig said. "They might find it more convenient to
go to the emergency department where they can get same-day service."
More than half of the visits were for urgent
care, including heart attacks, stroke, trauma cases, asthma and
fractures.
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