|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Its not like "ER"-The scandal of patient dumping
in US hospitals
By E. Galen
7 November 2001
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The television program ER is a perennially top-rated
show, both in the US and in many countries worldwide. Viewers
are accustomed to see, perhaps a half dozen times in every episode,
a new patient being wheeled into the emergency room, where a team
of doctors, nurses and other health care workers spring into action.
There is a rapid-fire flow of dialog, as the patients
vital signs are shouted out and other key information is communicated.
But there is one question you will never hear on ER
that is an ever-present concern in the real-life American hospital
emergency room, and increasingly determines what kind of treatment
a patient receiveswhat kind of health insurance the person
has.
If a person needs emergency medical treatment and rushes to
a hospital for treatment, what happens may not be what he or she
expects, that is, treatment based on how serious the signs and
symptoms are. In hundreds of hospitals, treatment is based on
money, not medicine.
Public Citizens Health Research Group recently published
the sixth in a series of reports on US hospital emergency room
practices, entitled Questionable Hospitals: 527 Hospitals
That Violated the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor ActA
Detailed Look at Patient Dumping. Passed by
the United States Congress in 1986 as a section of the Social
Security Act, the EMTALA provides that when a hospital emergency
department denies medical screening, denies stabilizing treatment
it has the capacity to provide, and/or inappropriately transfers
an individual with an unstabilized emergency condition, that hospital
is illegally dumping the patient.
Public Citizen examined the US governments Department
of Health and Human Services (DHHS) enforcement of the act. Through
the Freedom of Information Act, the group obtained the names of
hospitals that have violated the act. The violations were confirmed
by the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA), a federal
agency within the DHHS. (HCFA was renamed and is now called the
Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services.)
The current report primarily covers the years 1997, 1998, and
1999, with some violations from 1996 (not covered in previous
reports) and 2000. The data demonstrates:
* For-profit hospitals violate the act nearly twice as often
as not-for-profit hospitals.
* A patients insurance status influences hospital compliance
with the act. A patient may not be covered by insurance or may
have coverage, such as an HMO, which requires preauthorization
for treatment and frequently denies payment when the exam rules
out an emergency condition.
* Over 90 percent of the hospitals guilty of violations had
breached the screening, stabilizing treatment or transfer provisions
of the act, the most serious categories of offenses.
* Less than one-third of the hospitals identified as engaging
in illegal patient dumping were fined, and the total
of such fines averages barely $1 million a yeara pittance
for the trillion-dollar health care industry.
Medical screening
The EMTALA requires that all hospitals with emergency rooms
medically screen everyone who comes to the ER and
has a request for examination or treatment made on his or her
behalf. Violations include: outright denials, referrals
to other facilities, and requests for payment. In some cases patients
are not told that they have a right to an exam regardless of their
ability to pay, and thus refuse the exam when they
are asked for payment. In some cases, a hospitals screening
standard can be so low that it amounts to no screening at all.
Several examples describe hospitals violation of the
requirement for appropriate medical screening. A pregnant patient
came to Arrowhead Community Hospital in Glendale, Arizona on July
10, 1997. The hospitals own documentation stated: This
labor patient was in the care of an RN without any MSE [medical
screening exam] by an MD. She was discharged four hours
later, and came back the following day in active labor and was
admitted to the hospital. Her unborn child had died and the patient
herself died the day after admission. An autopsy revealed that
she died of internal hemorrhage because of the rupture of an aortic
aneurysm (abnormal dilation of an artery). Staff members who were
interviewed said: The doctor may give labor instructions
or discharge orders over the phone... and A physician
is supposed to see all the patients, but they dont always
do it.
In Baltimore, Maryland, on July 27, 1998, a 70-year-old man
accompanied his daughter to the hospital with a sick child. When
they arrived, the man told his daughter he didnt feel well
and would wait outside the hospital. Passersby noticed something
was wrong and called security. The security officers log
stated: 911 notified intoxicated male ... ER notified (refused)
An emergency medical technician with a private ambulance leaving
the hospital initiated CPR while the officer contacted the emergency
department for assistance. The emergency department again refused
assistance. Another ambulance arrived and transported the man
to the ER. About one-half hour after the man was first seen lying
in the grass, he was pronounced dead of cardiac arrhythmia.
In New York City, a survey on January 29, 1999 showed that
staff at St. Lukes-Roosevelt Hospitals ER informed
uninsured patients seeking treatment that they would be responsible
for a fee of over $400, before providing a screening exam. Many
uninsured patients left without any examination.
Stabilizing treatment and transfer
If a patient has an emergency medical condition, the hospital
ER must stabilize the condition to the best of its capability.
A hospital may transfer an unstabilized patient if the patient
or representative requests a transfer in writing and is informed
of the risks.
Many times, however, hospitals try to transfer patients in
cases where they believe the treatment will not be paid for. In
Houston, Texas on August 10, 1996, a patient came to the ER at
Doctors Hospital with symptoms of acute appendicitis, a
medical emergency. Because she had no insurance, she was discharged
and told to drive to another hospital, where she underwent surgery.
It is also illegal for hospitals to refuse to accept an appropriate
transfer of a patient who requires the specialized treatment it
can provide. Nondiscrimination violations often occur when a hospital
that can provide specialty care refuses to and instead transfers
the patient to still another care center, a third stop on what
can be a life-threatening runaround. For example, an ER physician
tried to transfer a patient with a diagnosed brain injury to Cedars-Sinai
Medical center in Los Angeles, California. Cedar-Sinai was the
closest facility, had a trauma service, and had 24-hour neurosurgical
on-call coverage. The ER physician refused to accept the transfer
and the patient experienced a three-hour wait while arrangements
were made for a transfer to a county facility.
Delay in treatment
The federal act says a hospital may not delay providing a screening
or stabilizing treatment in order to ask about the patients
method of payment or insurance.
In Brooklyn, New York, Kings County Hospitals ER posted
signs that the hospital required preauthorization or referral
from a patients Medicaid plan before treatment. As of April
2001, no civil monetary penalty had been imposed for this violation.
In Chicago, Illinois, a 19-year-old patient came to the ER
of Provident Hospital of Cook County with symptoms of threatened
miscarriage. The hospital sought HMO approval, which was denied.
The young woman was not given an exam or treatment. Because of
the delay, she began to deliver a nonviable fetus as she waited
for a taxi to take her to another hospital.
Managed care and the Emergency Treatment Act
Many Americans are enrolled in managed care health plans to
cover the costs of health care. Some of these managed care organizations
require preauthorization for examination and/or treatment. MCOs
may also deny or reduce payment for exams if the patient is found
not to have an emergency medical condition. These plans may try
to control costs by directing patients to the least expensive
place for treatment, limiting diagnostic procedures or requiring
these to be preauthorized. So when a hospital complies with the
EMTALA, but the MCO refuses to pay for emergency services, the
hospital bears the cost of treatment and has a strong disincentive
to comply with the act.
Thirteen states have enacted prudent layperson
standards. These laws require that insurers pay for visits to
the ER by their enrollees when symptoms would lead a prudent layperson
to believe that an emergency condition existed. In a recent study,
the University of North Carolina found that 86 percent of ER visits
first denied by one insurer, and 62 percent of ER visits first
denied by another insurer on grounds that the condition was not
a medical emergency, did meet the states prudent layperson
standard.
Another result of the managed care regulation is that specialty
physicians do not want to participate on hospitals on-call panels.
One reason hospitals have difficulty filling these panels is that
physicians fear they will not be reimbursed for the services they
are required to provide.
While a number of factors contribute to patient dumpingrace,
gender, political or personal biasthe predominant factor
is a patients financial or insurance status. The report
explains several factors that limit the scope of the study. Public
Citizen has no means of estimating the number of violations that
are unreported and does not have access to medical records surrounding
each violation.
But based on the data and examples that the group was able
to access, its report on patient dumping presents a picture of
an emergency health care system in which decisions on whether
to use the best treatment techniques are callously made based
on payment prospects. Throughout the US, individuals with potentially
life-threatening conditions are denied basic medical services
when they arrive at the hospital emergency room.
See Also:
First things first...
Bush protects drug giants patent on anthrax medicine
[20 October 2001]
Patients Bill of Rights:
not even a band-aid for US health care crisis
[7 July 2001]
US health plans drop coverage
for nearly one million elderly and disabled members
[23 January 2001]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |