CMA Media
Relations
Feb 26, 2003 posted
Emergency Room Losses Grow 24 Percent in FY 2001, Surpass Half Billion
Dollars in Uncompensated Care
SACRAMENTO - Emergency department losses at hospitals throughout the state
continued their upward surge as uncompensated care totaled $540 million in
Fiscal 2001 - a 24 percent increase from the year before, the California
Medical Association said today.
In its third annual report, the CMA found that hospitals reporting data in California lost $390
million in uncompensated care in FY2001, according to filings with the Office
of Statewide Health Planning and Development. Physicians provided an additional
$150 million in uncompensated care to patients during the fiscal year that
ended in June 2001. In FY2000, the total losses for physicians and hospitals
had totaled $434 million.
The financial crisis in emergency rooms permeates the state, with emergency
departments in large cities, small towns and rural areas experiencing
devastating losses, according to the data. Statewide, hospitals lose an average
of $71 for every patient who receives care in emergency departments.
"What we see here is an astonishing growth in losses and it shows no sign
of abating," said Dr. John Whitelaw, president of the California Medical
Assn. and a Sacramento
physician. "People depend on their emergency rooms to be there for them,
but these losses point to a crisis of extreme proportions and underlines the threat to emergency care around the state. We
are all just a heart attack or a car accident away from needing that
care."
While Los Angeles
County hospitals account
for a third of the losses — and it has four of the hospitals among the top 15 -
there are 27 hospitals around the state that lost more than $3 million each.
Other counties with hospitals suffering these extreme losses include San Bernardino, Stanislaus, Sacramento,
Shasta, Solano, Santa Clara, San
Diego, Fresno, San Joaquin, Contra
Costa and Alameda.
By county, the top losses were in Los Angeles
$120 million, San Bernardino $31 million, San Diego $26 million, Alameda
$24 million, Orange $20 million, Santa Clara and
Contra Costa $17 million, and Stanislaus and Sacramento with $10 million.
Why do the financial losses matter? Since January 1, 1999, 10 emergency rooms
have closed. Since mid-1997, 19 have shut their doors. Since 1990, 60 have
closed - nearly 15% of the emergency departments in the state.
"CMA's report solidifies what we know about California's Emergency Care System - it is
in shambles, and we cannot expect any system to continue to operate under such
severe losses," said Sen. Gloria Romero, (D-Rosemead). "What is even
more distressing is that the demand for treatment at emergency rooms and trauma
centers continues to grow rapidly as preventive healthcare programs are cut
because of the state budget crisis. We need to act fast," continued
Romero, who serves on the Senate Health and Human Services Subcommittee on California's Emergency
Medical Services.
Hours-long waits are common in emergency rooms around the state as doctors and
nurses struggle to triage the high volume of critically ill, sick and injured
who come through their doors every day. In addition, the number of closures is
high. In 1990, there were 407 emergency rooms in the state; by 2001 there were
just 347.
This year, problems have mounted:
Los Angeles County officials were about to close two
high-volume emergency departments until a last-minute federal bailout and a
parcel tax saved them from shuttering.
Tri-City Hospital
in San Diego County is considering an expansion of
its emergency room because the number of people leaving without treatment - 1
out of every 20 — is more than double the national benchmark.
These fixes in Los Angeles and San Diego counties are likely temporary
because these hospitals still fill the current or future demands from their
populations.
In Merced, the closing of an emergency room at Mercy Medical
Center has been postponed
because state inspectors want to ensure that a second facility on another
campus can meet the communityís needs.
"Dramatic losses like these signal a devastating and potentially permanent
erosion of our emergency care infrastructure," said Sen. Joe Dunn,
(D-Santa Ana) a longtime supporter of increased emergency care funding.
"More closures are inevitable. Every Californian will need emergency care
at some point in his or her lifetime. And yet if this financial trend
continues, there is no guarantee that Californians will be able to see an emergency
room doctor when they most need one."