Above is a trailer for a documentary about the waiting room in the emergency department of a large public hospital. I think it is a very accurate representation of some of the problems associated with the emergency room at Northeast Georgia Medical Center and it gives a great glimpse of what it is like to work in the emergency department.
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There is not one specific factor that causes long wait times for patients. More often than not, it’s a combination of several factors that cause extended periods of waiting. The two main factors that tend to cause long wait times are a high patient volume and not enough staff members. Due to the amount of patients in the emergency room, sometimes it can take an hour or more before the doctor can see the patient. Adding more staff member in key areas would help to alleviate some of the time patients spend waiting. My mentor, nurse Leigh Wilson, related, “I think we do need a few more nurses and definitely more techs to make moving the patients in and out of the ER quicker and more effectively. Patients are constantly having to wait on a tech to take them to their room.” Overall, the issue of long wait times is a very complex one.
From what I have observed though, Northeast Georgia Medical Center has implemented several programs and procedures to getting
patients in and out quickly, but still effectively caring for them. The hospital has made the G waiting room into curtain areas to be able to see patients which can help alleviate wait times. There are overflow beds in the ER where patients can be placed when there is a high influx of patients. The hospital has also opened overflow areas within the hospital to put admitted patients to free up more ER beds. These
procedures do help to lessen the wait times but it is just a quick fix. It
doesn't permanently fix the issue of long wait times.
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The Aurora Sinai Medical Center in downtown Milwaukee completely revamped their emergency medicine system in order to deal with long patient wait times and make their emergency department an economically viable part of the hospital again. The changes made to the emergency department at Aurora Sinai Medical Center include redefining what constitutes as an emergency, creating a detailed plan for each patient, and creating same-day appointments for patients to visit a physician’s office with a non-emergent condition all in accordance to the EMTALA law. “We want the ED to be all about safety, but not in a passive fashion. Like the air traffic control system, our goal is to be proactive, to seek something more, to be
assisting and directing who takes off,
who lands, when, where, and at what
airspeed. ” said John Whitcomb, MD, an emergency medicine
physician at Aurora Sinai
Medical Center. The new processes at Aurora Sinai took about six months to fully implement. After that time, their census began to drop dramatically as the community began to realize that the ED was not a place for primary care. In summary, Aurora Sinai was restored to economic viability, had fewer EMTALA concerns, and saw patient satisfaction rise dramatically in the months and years following the implementation of the new procedures.
In conclusion, this is a very serious issue that many urban and metropolitan hospitals are faced with. Several factors contribute to long wait times with the two most prominent bring an extremely high patient volume and not enough doctors, nurses, and other staff members. There have been several changes made to the emergency department at Northeast Georgia but they are a temporary fix. The administrators of the hospital could look to other urban hospitals such as Aurora Sinai Medical Center for examples on how to overturn the system entirely.