Title of article :
The state of ED on-call coverage in California
Author/Authors :
Scott E. Rudkin، نويسنده , , Jennifer Oman، نويسنده , , Mark I. Langdorf، نويسنده , , Maryann Hill، نويسنده , , John Bauche، نويسنده , , Paul Kivela، نويسنده , , Loren Johnson، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
The ED provides initial treatment, but failure of specialists to respond unravels the safety net. To assess the scope of problems with on-call physicians in California. A mailed anonymous survey to all CAL/ACEP physician members (1876) asking patient, physician and ED demographics, specialist availability for consultation, insurance profile, and availability of follow-up care. 608/1876 physicians responded (32.4%), representing 320/353 California EDs (90.6%). The seven specialties in which the greatest proportion of EDs reported trouble with specialty response were: plastic surgery (37.5%), ENT (35.9%), dentistry (34.9%), psychiatry (26.0%), neurosurgery (22.9%), ophthalmology (18.4%) and orthopedics (18.0%). 71.6% of responder EDs reported that their medical staff rules required ED on-call coverage. However, the percentage of responders who stated that hospitals paid each specialty for call was low: neurosurgery (37.3%), orthopedics (34.4%), ENT (17.9%), plastic surgery (15.1%) and ophthalmology (13.1%). On-call problems were more acute at night (77.2%) or on weekends (72.4%). Patient insurance negatively affected (69.9%) willingness of on-call physicians to consult for at least a quarter of patients. Regarding follow-up, 91% reported some trouble, whereas 64% reported a problem at least half the time. Surgical sub-specialists are the most problematic on-call physicians. Insurance status has a major negative effect on ED and follow-up care. The on-call situation in California has reached crisis proportions.
Keywords :
consultation , On-call , Emergency department , Specialty
Journal title :
American Journal of Emergency Medicine
Journal title :
American Journal of Emergency Medicine