Title: ED Overcrowding
1ED Overcrowding Throughput
- By Deb Delaney
- Massachusetts Emergency Nurses Association
- June 21,2006
2Objectives
- Acknowledge current situation of overcrowding
- Identify factors causing overcrowding
- Learn strategies to improve ED throughput time
- Understand common terminology
- Utilize consistent data for comparison
benchmarking
3Ultimate Objective
- Realize ED overcrowding is a symptom of a greater
problem - and the ED is NOT the problem
4Its so simple!!
Dave Eitel MD MBA ( ESI 5 Level triage)
5Factors affecting ED Length of Stay (ED LOS)
6Input Arrivals
- Whos coming ?
- Emergencies other
- Why do people present to ED
- Insurance Status
- Sicker people discharged from hospital
- Unavailable Primary Care
- Perception of quality of care
7Input (cont)
- Growing number of uninsured
- 44 million and growing
- Have no alternative
- Under insured
- Cost of insurance premiums increasing
- Wait longer due to
- Saturated primary care offices
- Only game in town for nights weekends
8Throughput
- Actual ED operations
- Design of ED processes
- Registration, triage, treatment areas
- Staffing (type, skill, and number)
- Availability
- Specialists
- Diagnostic information
- Increased use of images
- Access to critical info (ie. med records, old
EKGs,etc.)
9Throughput ED start to finish
10Output
- Hospital Admission
- Available beds?Staff?
- Transport/housekeeping
- Community Discharge
- Detox? Mental health beds?
- Rehab? SNF
- Morgue
- ME case? Prisoner? Religious issues? Etc.
- Back to OTHER
- Nursing home transfer
- Prison
11Urgent Matters Input / Throughput / Output Model
12ED overcrowding
- 91 of EDs in USA report at or over capacity
- American College of Emergency Physicians Study
- Contributing to this were the following
- High volume/acuity
- Radiology delays
- Laboratory delays
- Consultant delays
- Insufficient space
- Delays threaten patient safety
- Delays in diagnosis treatment
- decreased quality of care poorer pt outcomes
r/t delays
13Factors Contributing to Waiting/Overcrowding
14Over capacity by region
15Where we are.
- BUT
- The good news is..
- its on everyones radar
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18ED uniqueities
- Open 24 / 7 / 365
- Highly trained Physicians and Nurses
- Open to all-no referrals needed
- EMTALA-COBRA
- Americas Healthcare Safety Net
- Medicaid / uninsured / vulnerable populations
- Mix of care provided
- Major and minor treatment welcome here
19GAO Report (General Accounting Office) March 2003
- commissioned by the US Senate to evaluate extent
of overcrowding - Data collected from July /01 thru Feb /03
- Survey 2000 hospitals (74 response rate!)
- Indicators for comparison
- Diversion
- Boarding
- Left before medical evaluation (LWBS)
20Findings
- Diversions
- 2/3 of the nations hospitals were forced to
divert ambulances to other facilities - Boarding
- Major cause of ED overcrowding r/t holding of
admitted patients - LWBS
- Average between 3-5
- Worse in teaching hospital
- Increased risk and decreased satisfaction
21ED volume (2000)
NHAMCS 2000-National Center for Health Statistics
22CDC NHAMCS (2003)(National Hospital Ambulatory
Medical Care Survey)
- Updated totals
- 113.9 million ED visits
- (another 6 increase since 2000 report)
- of Emergency Departments 4079
- Another 98 EDs have closed
232003 NHAMCS stats (cont)
- 15.8 million patients were admitted to the
hospital via the ED (14) - 2 million transfers (1.9)
- 16 million arrived by ambulance (14.2)
- Majority ambulance over 65 years old
- Only 9 of visits nationwide were clinic level
(or triage level 5)
24Massachusetts
of Hospital Beds per 1000 residents
of admissions per hospital bed
25Wait time to MD eval
- 46.5 min ave.
- wait to see a physician
- 3.2 hours
- average
- length of stay
26Utilization
- 38.9 visits per 100 persons
- Medicaid enrollees 64.2 visits per 100
- Private insurance 21.5 visits per 100
- Uninsured 34.2 per 100
27 of ED visits per hospital beds
Massachusetts
USA
28ED - Current flow
- ED Treatment Rooms24 available
- Flow One patient out another one in
- National Benchmark 1 treatment bed per 2,000
annual visits
29ED Overcrowding
- As the available ED beds fill up, the waiting
room begins to back up
Increased wait time decreased satisfaction
increased LWBS decreased revenue
Hall 1 2 3
Managers office
30JCAHO report
- over ½ of all reported sentinel events
- in the
- delays in treatment category
- occur in hospital EDs
31JCAHO LD 3.15 (Leadership Standard)effective
Jan 2, 2005
- JCAHO recognizes its not an ED problem!!!
- Even changed the name
- From ED Overcrowding to HOSPITAL Overcrowding
- Hospital leadership MUST develop and implement
plans to identify and mitigate impediments to
efficient patient flow throughout the hospital
32More leadership standards
- LD.3.20 Patients with comparable needs receive
the same standard of care, treatment and service
despite their physical location - LD.3.30 Commitment to community by providing
essential services in a timely manner
33So? What can we DO ??
- To Decompress the ED you must either
- close the front door
- Ambulance diversion
- Wait till they give up (LWBS)
- or
- Open the back door
- Allow the crowd thats present to leave
34Left Without Being Seen (LWBS)
- Patients registered triaged
- but leave before being seen by a physician
- Majority (60 ) went back to (or another) ED
- 46 of LWBS needed medical attention
- 11 were admitted to hospital within a week
- Major source of patient dissatisfaction
- Nobody cared about me
- I had an emergency but they made me wait
- Overall a Negative Experience
35Cost of LWBS ?
- Ave 225 per ED patient
- LWBS average 3-5
- LWBS loss? At least 250,000/year
- Plus cost of follow up
- Research Complaints
- Return later / need more care
- Dont return is worse!!
36US Health Care Expenditures 2004
Total 1.8 Trillion
Physician Services 23
Other 19
Nursing home 7
Prescription drugs 10
Hospital care 33
Other professional 8
37Cot of keeping up!
38CT Utilization
39Space in the hospital
Emergency department
The rest of the hospital
40- In spite of a gazillion square feet
- in the rest of the hospital
- and a zillion more staff
- who incidentally
- are actually TRAINED
- in inpatient care
-
- lets stuff all the overflow
- into the tiniest
- Busiest
- most critical
- and chaotic space
- in the hospital.
This is Health Care Planning as a Fraternity
Stunt.
--Peter Viccellio MD
41Areas of Variability (Competing for resources)
- Emergency Department demand
- Elective procedures (seeking same resources)
- Discharges (opening up beds)
Which factors are more easily controlled?
42SUNY -Stonybrook
Old model
New model
43Share the burden
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45What can we do now?
- Plan ahead
- Data collection is mandatory
- Feds and others need to keep hearing from us
- JCAHO requires full administrative support
46What we should NOT do!
- More Ambulance Diversion
- Transfer elsewhere
- Triage out
- Ignore the safety net
- Minimize unnecessary visits
- Stop trying new ideas
- Give up!
STOP
47BUTThey dont belong here!!!
- Anti- Dumping Laws- COBRA/EMTALA
- Patients arriving to EDs are sicker and in need
of more services - Only 9.1 of visits nationwide were clinic
level (or triage level 5) - (Over 90 needed legitimate ED care)
48Societal safety net
- It IS what we do!! SHOUT IT OUT!!
- 24/7 services to all despite ability to pay
- Who else can say that!!!
- patient mix includes substantial share of
- Uninsured gt42 million uninsured US residents
(Asplin AEM 11/01 vol 8 No 11) - Medicaid (36 million) other vulnerable
population - Affirmed and mandated by federal legislation
- Increased ED burden as other social programs have
eroded
49Why not Just build more!!!
- Mass Laws-Department of Public Health 105 CMR
130.834 regarding ED requirements - Hospital staffing based on of staffed beds
- Decreased utilization and lower reimbursements
reduce inpatient beds - More beds for specialties () reduce flexibility
- Reduced SNF and home health care for hospital
discharges - Insurance reviewers scrutiny
- Balanced Budget act (BBA) reimbursement changes
to Medicare
50Region 3
Region 2
Region 1
Region 4
Region 5
Massachusetts Census 2000 Population
6,349,097 State Acreage Total 5,176,255.6
51The Commonwealth of MassachusettsExecutive
Office of Health and Human ServicesDepartment of
Public Health250 Washington Street, Boston, MA
02108-4619
- Over the past five years The Department of Public
Health (Department) has been working
collaboratively with the Massachusetts Hospital
Association and other stakeholders on initiatives
to address problems associated with Emergency
Department (ED) overcrowding, patient boarding,
and ambulance diversion. This letter is one of an
ongoing series that communicates to hospitals the
Departments expectations regarding policies that
address these ED issues.
52- The goal of all of these efforts is maintain the
hospitals capacity to accept and manage new
patients presenting for emergency care, which
requires that hospitals move admitted patients
out of the ED as quickly and safely as possible.
This year, to facilitate the expeditious movement
of patients out of the ED, the Department has
reviewed the widely discussed approach of
temporarily - placing stabilized patients admitted through
the ED, onto inpatient floors, where they can be
monitored by nursing staff while waiting for a
bed to become available. - Recognizing that receiving care on an inpatient
unit is usually preferable to receiving care
while boarding in the ED, the Department will
endorse this practice, and expects that hospitals
will implement this option as appropriate, as one
of many strategies to prevent boarding in the ED.
In order to assure the safety of patients,
hospitals that adopt this practice must have
developed protocols approved by their governing
bodies that address issues identified in Addendum
A (see attached).
53So how do we fix it?
- Understand the problem
- Need clinical quality measures
- PI / CQI / QA / TQM etc.
- AND also ED Benchmark data
- Dashboard monitors
- Data for comparison (vs. ourselves others)
- Uniform definitions r/t ED operations
54State the problem clearly
55ED Dashboard Monitors
Volume/Age/Payer mix Patient satisfaction of
Inpatient admissions originating from ED of ED
admissions Acuity LWBS Diversion hours Boarder
hours Times from disposition to admit by unit
Time from arrival to triage Triage time Triage to
bed Bed to provider Consultant response
time Overall ED length of stay Discharged ED
LOS Admit LOS Staff turnover/vacancy
56Collect and measure
- Choose your dashboard criteria
- Pick a few that are easily collectable
- Tracking boards?
- Timestamps?
- Daily logs?
- Establish GOALS
- Benchmarks available
57Diversion logsample
58Urgent Matters research
- 10 safety net hospitals received grant
- ED bed assigned to ED doc
- Total throughput time
- Inpatient bed assignment till pt leaves ED
- Hours on diversion
- Disposition by MD to decision made
59Sample Performance Indicators report
form Urgent Matters
60Benchmarking goals
61Parallel Processing
62Proven Methods That have worked for others
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65Moving admission upstairs
66Easy Cruisin ahead ?
67Baby boomer effect???
- Baby boomer generation80 million strong
- Born 1946-1964 the first turned 60 this year!
- majority of ambulance arrivals are over 65 years
of age (approx 40 are gt 65) - increase in visits by elderly patients past three
years (59) - fastest growing segment of society now reaching
retirement age - Increased emphasis on cardiac care/home
care/innovative treatment modalities/long term
care/etc
68Dont add roadblocks..
69But when this happens..
70Have a plan
71Final thought
- Our greatest glory
- is not in never failing
- but in rising up every time we fail
- -Ralph Waldo Emerson
- If we wanted easywe wouldnt be in the ED.
72If a tree falls in the forestand nobody hears
it.
- Is it still the ERs fault?