Legislative Update – Oct/12/2009

October 12th, 2009

Download the full report.

NOTE: These reports are based on keyword searches and are by no means all-inclusive. Some bills may be missed. If you wish you can perform your own search at www.oslpr.org/buscar.

Meeting Minute Sep 3, 2009

September 27th, 2009

The minute for the meeting which took place on September 3, 2009 at the San Juan Bautista Hospital in Caguas is now available.

You can download the full document here.

You must be a registered member in order to view and download the document. If you have trouble signing in or have not received your username and password, go to the Contact Us section and write us a note.

An Open Letter from America’s Emergency Physicians

September 24th, 2009

As the physicians on the front lines of emergency care, we see the tragic problems of a failing health care system. We care for people who are ravaged by untreated disease; help worried mothers on weekends with sick children, unable to access a system that’s open 9 to 5, weekdays only; and treat the victims of heart attack, stroke and injuries whose very lives depend on our care.

The role of emergency medicine has been badly misrepresented during the health care reform debate. The American College of Emergency Physicians supports comprehensive reform, including universal coverage. But it is vitally important that reform legislation not be based on erroneous perceptions, but instead address the critical problems harming emergency patients. It is time to debunk the myths, focus on the real problems and outline solutions to ensure that health care reform will protect and enhance everyone’s access to quality, timely emergency care.

Myth:  Emergency medical care is expensive and inefficient. Reducing emergency care will “bend the cost curve” on our nation’s rising health care costs.
Fact:  The 120 million annual visits made to emergency departments account for only 3% of all health care spending. In addition, emergency departments are equipped with state-of- the-art diagnostic equipment and highly trained physicians who can draw on many hospital resources quickly, providing coordinated, efficient patient care. The fixed costs of being open 24/7 are high, but the variable costs for seeing patients in the emergency department are the same as anywhere else care is provided.

Myth:  Emergency departments are crowded with patients seeking non-urgent care.
Fact:  Only 12.1% of emergency patients have non-urgent conditions that could wait 2 to 24 hours for medical care, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). While this percentage may be slightly higher in some hospitals, the reality is that crowded conditions and longer wait times are primarily caused by patients being “boarded,” or forced to stay in the emergency department – often on gurneys lining the hallways – long after they have been seen and admitted to the hospital.

Myth:  Your local emergency department will always be there when you need it.
Fact:  Hundreds of emergency departments have closed nationwide because of an overburdened emergency care system. Those remaining must accommodate an average increase of 3 million more patient visits each year. Every 60 seconds emergency care is delayed when an ambulance is diverted to a distant hospital because a nearer one is unable to accept more patients. In addition, 75% of emergency department directors report significant problems getting needed on-call specialists, such as neurosurgeons and orthopedists, to provide vital on-call services to emergency patients.

Myth:  The need for emergency care will decrease when health care reform is enacted.
Fact:  With a growing and aging population, our role in providing care to the sick and injured any time day or night, and our front line responsibility in responding to natural and man-made disasters, will be in even greater demand in the future. Since enacting its universal health care legislation, Massachusetts has experienced an increase in emergency department patients. Emergency medicine is an essential community service that is vitally important to our nation’s health care system.

To help ensure our country has a strong emergency care system, the American College of Emergency Physicians supports comprehensive health care reform that includes:

  • Every person in America must have meaningful and affordable health insurance coverage provided through a combination of employer and individually mandated insurance. It should be means-tested, allowing those in need to receive coverage or financial support to buy insurance. A combination of private sector and governmental solutions may be needed to achieve universal coverage. America is experiencing a dramatically rising tide of uninsured and underinsured patients. Emergency physicians are the only doctors in the country required by federal law to treat all patients regardless of their ability to pay. It is a responsibility we embrace proudly, but many emergency departments and physician groups are closing under the burden of uncompensated care.
  • Health care costs must be reduced. Significant medical liability reform is needed to eliminate unnecessary, expensive tests known as “defensive medicine.” Liability reform can also help increase the availability of critically needed on-call specialists. Widespread adoption of electronic health records could substantially cut costs and improve patient care if there were complete integration of data between the emergency department and other medical settings. Administrative and overhead costs must be reduced.
  • Quality and patient safety must be improved by eliminating the practice of “boarding” admitted patients in emergency department hallways until they are transferred to an in-patient hospital bed. This can be achieved by establishing quality standards that define how quickly admitted patients are moved to their appropriate care settings, with such information reported and available to the public.
  • A national surge capacity plan must be developed and resources provided to prepare our nation’s hospital emergency departments for public health crises such as the H1N1 pandemic, a terrorist attack or other catastrophes.

With so much at stake, America can no longer ignore the crisis in its emergency medical care system or make health reform decisions based on myths.  Go to www.acep.org/realities for information on protecting your access to quality, timely emergency care.

We must act now.

Nick Jouriles, MD, FACEP
President
American College of Emergency Physicians

Legislative Update – Sep/16/09

September 16th, 2009

This report includes the controversial bill PC2001 which wants to charge a higher deductible to patients that are beneficiaries of PR’s Government Health Plan that come into the ED and do not have a “true medical emergency.”

In an interview by El Nuevo Dia, House Vice President Gabriel Rodríguez Aguiló says they will define what a true medical emergency is based on the criteria established by the American College of Emergency Physicians.

Download the full report.

NOTE: These reports are based on keyword searches and are by no means all-inclusive. Some bills may be missed. If you wish you can perform your own search at www.oslpr.org/buscar.

Meeting Minute July 30, 2009

September 16th, 2009

The minute for the meeting which took place on July 30, 2009 at El Tenedor in Juncos is now available.

You can download the full document here.

You must be a registered member in order to view and download the document. If you have trouble signing in or have not received your username and password, go to the Contact Us section and write us a note.

NEW!! – Photo Gallery

July 19th, 2009

We have added a Photo Gallery section to our website.

Only registered members are allowed to view this section. If you are not a member of PR ACEP but you have participated in any of our Chapter’s Events let us know and we will add you to our Friends list. This will grant you access to the Photo Gallery section.

Most of the images have not been tagged, so if you see yourself or a friend of yours in a picture let us know and we will add the info to it.

If you consider any of the images inappropriate or would like us to remove a picture go to the Contact Us section and drop us a line.

Legislative Update – Jul/16/09

July 16th, 2009

Bill RCS0189 seeks spending 300K or less repairing two broken down helicopters belonging to FURA to use them as air ambulances.

Download the full report.

NOTE: These reports are based on keyword searches and are by no means all-inclusive. Some bills may be missed. If you wish you can perform your own search at www.oslpr.org/buscar.

Expenses Reports

July 12th, 2009

For your convenience we have posted the PRACEP’s Caribbean Symposium on Emergency Medicine Expenses Reports from 2007-2009.

You can view and download the reports by clicking the following links:

  • 2007 Expenses Report
  • 2008 Expenses Report
  • 2009 Expenses Report
  • You must be a registered member in order to view and download these documents. If you have trouble signing in or have not received your username and password, go to the Contact Us section and write us a note.

    2009 Assembly Minute

    July 12th, 2009

    The meeting minute for the general assembly which took place during the 2009 PRACEP’s Caribbean Symposium on Emergency Medicine is now available.

    You can download the full document here.

    You must be a registered member in order to view and download the document. If you have trouble signing in or have not received your username and password, go to the Contact Us section and write us a note.

    Legislative Update – Jul/06/09

    July 7th, 2009

    One bill jumps to my attention on this week’s legislative update. Bill PS0942 pretends to amend the “Carta de Derechos y Responsabilidades del Paciente” to read that in order for a patient to receive equal and respectful treatment, he/she must be evaluated in a medical facility within one hour after registration and if a transfer to another institution is needed, this must not take longer than 6 hours.

    If that bill went into effect today, how many of us would be able to comply?

    Download the full report.

    NOTE: These reports are based on keyword searches and are by no means all-inclusive. Some bills may be missed. If you wish you can perform your own search at www.oslpr.org/buscar.