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Why Malden needs a Community Health Clinic!!!

The American healthcare system accounts for 16% of the country’s economic output. As the population ages, spending on Medicare and Medicaid alone is estimated to make up 12% of the nation’s spending by 2050.

Emergency room visits are one of the most expensive places to receive care, driving healthcare expenditures through the roof. According to HHS and the CDC, there were 136.1 million emergency room visits in 2009, averaging a price tag of $1,318. For the uninsured and persons age 45-64, the cost was even higher ($1,397 and $1,696 respectively).

ER visits contribute to skyrocketing costs. For comparison, consider that an office-based physician visit averages $199 while a home-based skilled nursing visit is about $140.

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ER visits and the aging population

Older adults make up nearly one quarter of all emergency room visits, a total of 16.7 million visits in 2005. This utilization is expected to surge to 11.7 million patients annually by 2013. Not only do older adults use the ER at a higher rate, they also have longer stays more hospitalizations and readmissions.

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Why is the ER a critical access point for care among elderly Americans? The presence of multiple co-morbidities or chronic illness, a high prevalence of cognitive disorders, and frailty contribute to delayed or inaccurate diagnosis complicating treatment and leading to more emergency rooms visits.

Successful discharge is another challenge that dominos from older adult’s high utilization of the ER. While care coordination efforts are now improving care transitions from hospital to home, more work is needed to identify innovative solutions for enhancing care transitions for seniors. Medication management, social support, and environmental factors can contribute to high re-hospitalization and re-admission rates among the aging population.

Geriatric emergency rooms

Recognizing the need for care suited to the aging population, institutions have launched geriatric-specific emergency room care. Geriatric ER’s have popped up around New Jersey, New York, Maryland, and other states.

These specialized facilities take into account ambient changes relevant to aging persons, including the addition of nonskid floors, extra railings, and thicker mattresses to reduce bedsores. Specialized care plan improvements are also being tested to enhance the role of particular providers: A pharmacist may review medication lists to check for dangerous interactions and nurse may perform a home visit to assess the risk for falls.

While the geriatric ER presents a step in the right direction, the outcome of these programs is still unclear.

Have you had an ER experience as a caregiver or elder care provider? How do you think the system can be improved?

Related Posts:Share on facebookShare on twitterShare on emailShare on pinterest_shareMore Sharing Services11This entry was posted in Chronic Illness, Clinical Conditions, Eldercare, Financial Issues, Health Providers, Home Based Health Care, Policy and tagged aging population, care coordination, care transitions, chronic disease, chronic illness, co-morbidities, discharge, elderly, emergency room, ER visit, frailty, Geriatric emergency rooms, healthcare, home-based skilled nursing visit, medicaid, medicare, medication management, older adults, re-hospitalization and re-admission rates. Bookmark the permalink. ← Helping Aging Parents Declutter: 3 Resources To KnowElderly Urinary Tract Infection Symptoms and Risk Factors →2 Responses to ER visits and the elderly: Why are costs so high?
  1. Karen Durrant says: August 25, 2013 at 9:26 am

    ER visits are often emergency visits in this population (e.g. fall, chest pain, strokes, bleeding). Medical conditions that can’t wait for the patient to be seen by their regular physician during office hours. Their regular physician would probably send them to the ER anyway, if they were able to contact them.

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