Uninsured adults presenting to US emergency departments: assumptions vs data
- PMID: 18940978
- DOI: 10.1001/jama.300.16.1914
Uninsured adults presenting to US emergency departments: assumptions vs data
Abstract
Context: Emergency departments (EDs) are experiencing increased patient volumes and serve as a source of care of last resort for uninsured patients. Common assumptions about the effect of uninsured patients on the ED often drive policy solutions.
Objective: To compare common unsupported statements about uninsured patients presenting to the ED with the best available evidence on the topic.
Data sources: OVID search of MEDLINE and MEDLINE in-process citations from 1950 through September 19, 2008, using the terms (Emergency Medical Services OR Emergency Service, Hospital OR emergency department.mp OR emergency medicine.mp OR Emergency Medicine) AND (uninsured.mp OR medically uninsured OR uncompensated care OR indigent.mp OR uncompensated care.mp OR medical indigency).
Study selection: Of 526 articles identified, 127 (24%) met inclusion/exclusion criteria. Articles were included if they focused on the medical and surgical care of adult (aged 18 to <65 years) uninsured patients in emergency settings. Excluded articles involved pediatric or geriatric populations, psychiatric and dental illnesses, and non-patient care issues.
Data extraction: Statements about uninsured patients presenting for emergency care that appeared without citation or that were not based on data provided in the articles were identified using a qualitative descriptive approach based in grounded theory. Each assumption was then addressed separately in searches for supporting data in national data sets, administrative data, and peer-reviewed literature.
Results: Among the 127 identified articles, 53 had at least 1 assumption about uninsured ED patients, with a mean of 3 assumptions per article. Common assumptions supported by the evidence include assumptions that increasing numbers of uninsured patients present to the ED and that uninsured patients lack access to primary care. Available data support the statement that care in the ED is more expensive than office-based care when appropriate, but this is true for all ED users, insured and uninsured. Available data do not support assumptions that uninsured patients are a primary cause of ED overcrowding, present with less acute conditions than insured patients, or seek ED care primarily for convenience.
Conclusion: Some common assumptions regarding uninsured patients and their use of the ED are not well supported by current data.
Comment in
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Uninsured patients and emergency department use in the United States.JAMA. 2009 Mar 18;301(11):1124; author reply 1124-5. doi: 10.1001/jama.2009.274. JAMA. 2009. PMID: 19293410 No abstract available.
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