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How To Fix Any ER In 3 Easy Steps

Airport +Disney +Catch'n'Release
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Suspecting a fractured foot in December 2023, I drove myself to our local public Emergency Room, hobbled in and spent 7 hours* observing the grinding system struggling to serve our community, and the unsustainable toll it takes on Healthcare Providers. The front-facing walk-in ER is a small part of the machine of the public hospital, but requires an outsized amount of resources.

8 OPP Officers in 5 squad cars, 3 Security Guards and 2 Social Workers talked down and removed belligerent patients. Busy Cleaners mopped up blood and vomit. A distressed patient yelled into his speakerphone, sharing personal details with everyone within earshot. A severely disoriented fellow sloped by and crashed into my sore foot, before bursting into a bathroom to throw up for the third time. Ill and frightened children and people with severe headaches suffered through this melee, sitting on plastic bucket chairs under bright fluorescent lighting in a stale, windowless room. I waited 4.5 hours for an X-ray, and a further 2.5 hours to see an overworked Doctor…for 45 seconds. Afterward, someone pointed me to the non-obvious exit arrow, and I traversed the maze of hallways to eventually show myself out.

This breakdown requires a compassionate solution, borrowed from efficient systems already in use:

Step 1 ‘Airport Security’ screening (estimated time: 1-2 minutes)

Upon arrival at the ER, the ambulatory patient passes through the full-body x-ray scanner in the vestibule, while being observed by a calm witness in scrubs or a white coat who gives the visual impression of professional medical care while welcoming and assisting patients’ in ‘Wash your hands, Wear a mask’ protocol.

(If you don’t want to go through the scanner, you are free to enter the other end of the hospital and camp out in the waiting room for days! *7 hours' wait is so 'last year'; the average wait time crested 21 hours today.)

***additional time required for the following: If found to be carrying weapons or concealed contraband, Police Officers on standby will process the person before they try again to go through screening. If found to have traumatic injury (broken bones, bleeding, obstructed airway) the patient will be whisked by a Porter directly to Imaging/Surgery. If giving birth, Mother is wheeled directly to Labour and Delivery. *** If they have neither weapons nor any immediately discernible issue, the patient enters the ER foyer.

Step 2 ‘Disney’ Registration kiosks (estimated time: 1-5minutes)

Upon entering the clean, pastel-coloured ER foyer, the scanned patient proceeds to one of at least three unobstructed Registration desks, staffed by a Nurse Practitioner and a Scribe. The NP interacts with the patient while the Scribe observes and records. The patient supplies their OHIP card, has a photo taken, submits a finger print, and has a blood pressure reading with a cuff or hand scan. All of the IDs match—the patient’s previous history and ongoing concerns appear. The photo is analyzed for medical signs of decompensation, including pupil size and pallor, the finger print is checking pulse ox, and palm/wrist scan/cuff provides blood pressure reading. If blood work is required, it can be taken now and processed before seeing the Doctor.

***additional time required for the following: If the patient appears to be primarily in need of emotional support or psychiatric services, a Social Worker will bring the patient through to the Quiet Room for further testing and treatment options. If the patient needs an ECG or hands-on exam (heart attack/stroke) from a Doctor, is decompensating or having a ‘bad trip’, they will be seen immediately in the Triage area. If the patient needs further X-rays or a CT scan, they will taken directly to Imaging before returning to Triage. Every unsteady patient will be offered a Porter-assisted wheelchair ride to other locations, which reduces liability and provides a sense of caring and teamwork. *** Step 3 Hunters and Anglers’ Catch and Release (est. time 3-5 minutes)

Upon discharge from the ER, the patient will be offered a drink of fresh filtered water and a small snack of fresh fruit, vegetables, or flax crackers, to ameliorate the stress of the illness and reason for the ER visit. The food and water will be offered from hand to hand, effectively normalizing the stress response to ensure safe travel, while also giving the patient a tangible sense of well-being. The patient will be accompanied to the exit, after first ensuring that any follow-up appointments or tasks are understood.

*** None of this is possible without Step 0: Build and Staff more Long-Term Care ('Nursing Home') facilities to free up hospital beds. Congested beds are why the rest of the system is constipated.

Step 0.5: (RE)build dedicated homes for the chronically mentally ill, severely addicted, and for those with special needs who can never live independently (see L'Arche and Summerhill) so they have in-house support.

***

This setup makes better use of existing buildings, equipment, and personnel. This plan expects the best but prepares for the worst—days in which the system is overwhelmed and nothing goes right. We’re already losing good people and failing to provide—why not try something half-baked?!

Sgt Teacup, Jan 15 2024

30 Days of US Healthcare: The Hospital C Suite https://www.youtube...watch?v=wiSyWPnaSBw
[Voice, Jan 16 2024]

30 Days of US Healthcare: Insurance Kickbacks https://www.youtube...watch?v=t47yWjKNyeI
[Voice, Jan 16 2024]

Private Equity goes to therapy https://www.youtube...watch?v=R5C4v22y3C0
[Voice, Jan 20 2024]

The Middlemen of Healthcare https://www.youtube...watch?v=_khH6pZnHCM
Last one, I promise [Voice, Jan 21 2024]

An idea whose time has come>past due https://www.thetril...-wait-times-8118274
entertaining solution vs. deadly serious problem [Sgt Teacup, Jan 21 2024]

Blow it up, or fix it right https://barrie.ctvn...ion-plans-1.6747288
Why not both?! [Sgt Teacup, Jan 31 2024]

[link]






       You lost me at the security screening. There is already too much safety and delaying the medical care of anyone who prefers liberty is evil. [-] Furthermore it takes an actual screening to detect many kinds of life-threatening problems.   

       The real problem is lack and underuse of urgent care, this caused by a large number of people who can't afford urgent care and who were never taught how to use the medical system. This is exacerbated by a plethora of evils which include and/or boil down to the inability of a person to shop around for medical care in urgent situations, a lack of real competition, heartless republicans, brainless democrats, lobbyists, private equity, greedy everyone, profiteering insurance companies, doctors associations which limit the number of doctors to drive up wages, evil drug companies, lying politicians, lying hospital administrators, lying insurance companies, etc etc etc. None of which are addressed by this idea. Reading through the rest of the idea makes me wish I could bone it twice.
Voice, Jan 16 2024
  

       Sorry to hear about your foot, [Sgt].
pertinax, Jan 16 2024
  

       //There is already too much safety//   

       If you worked every day with random new people, many of whom had ... issues, of various kinds, then you might not feel this way.
pertinax, Jan 16 2024
  

       Most of this idea seems to be "Make emergency care much better funded and staffed" which is not a new idea
hippo, Jan 16 2024
  

       Well, we already have the security guard with the metal detector wand at the door of my local hospital. I have learned the hard way that the best way to get fast service is to use the word "stroke".
normzone, Jan 18 2024
  

       Despite the many ways USA healthcare system *is* fouled up, I must point out [Sgt Teacup] proudly hails from Canuckistan. Where things are apparently... worse?   

       [Sgt Teacup], how's the foot doing?
a1, Jan 21 2024
  

       Having waited in an ER a few times in a few countries, I can sympathize with how it's often the catch-all clearing house for a lot of societies problems. In Philadelphia, I've visited the ER and there is already metal detectors on the way in for ambulatory patients and visitors of all kinds. Security is visible, but how effective I'm not sure. Even in a private healthcare system with both bones of my forearm obviously broken, I was consigned to a cart for hours before a doctor turned up*. The treatment rooms were largely occupied by full of people having a crisis on an already high baseline of chronic illnesses. In winter, the homeless population will use key words like "chest pains" to get a warm bed for the night. I don't blame them, but it's the most expensive way of delivering a warm safe bed that just gets spread across every other bill the hospital puts out.   

       Once an X-ray confirmed the obvious (the arm was 4 inches shorter than the other and about 4x thicker) and orthopedics people turned up, I was zipped away for surgery the same night and back in work the next morning. Almost as impressive as the bill for hundreds of thousands of dollars.   

       In England, I saw the problem at its worst: City center, saturday night, hundreds of people waiting hours and hours, fights, people getting beer and pizza to pass the time before getting whatever injury looked at. As a solution, I took my then girlfriend an hour or so to a provincial hospital in the town I was from. Her abdominal pains, (ultimately a rupturing teratoma) were right at the top of the list in this smaller town department and treatment was rapid.   

       I've also seen an English A&E(ER) dept. totally flooded with patients, many serious, and watched as it was coped with extremely well. This was using something called "Consultant level triage". This is where consultant Doctors, the top level of specialization/seniority in the NHS are called in en masse**. After very brief triage from a nurse: "abdominal pain, possible broken leg etc" Patients are routed to a relevant specialist. Either standing up front with a line of patients in front of them or moving from patient to patient. These experienced specialists massively speed up the whole effort. Basic tests can be bypassed, patients can be immediately routed to the relevant ward without hanging around waiting for a consult. More specialist tests can be ordered, imaging can be looked at right away rather than waiting for it to wing it's way by internal mail etc. on and on. Also, things move faster when everyone's boss is around.   

       *Billing was there in minutes however, that dept. has an almost problematic level of efficiency.   

       **They do not like this, neither do their golf partners.
bs0u0155, Jan 25 2024
  

       [a1], thanks for reminding the folks that Canuckistan is really not USAidit, and also not UKay. Hence, this half-baked idea to use other systems as a half-baked ER solution, because more of the same nothing still isn't working and now they want to blow it all up (see link). Perhaps someone on the design team reads HB, and will see this idea.   

       Still no conclusion about the foot: Morton's neuroma is the working concept. Indometacin is helping foot, liver/lung pain, and reducing swollen lymph nodes. Next up: Feb 13 EarNoseThroat scope, maybe even biopsy (!) of 1.6cm mass.
Sgt Teacup, Jan 31 2024
  

       The obvious problem is that the human body is too complicated. We need to do some redesigning and cost reduction. Too many redundant and overlapping systems, and not enough plug-and-play. That would simplify healthcare quite a bit. Standardized fittings and hardware would go a long way, too. And who the heck designs wet systems that don't have functional shutoff valves?   

       Intelligent design my ass. This is basic engineering.
RayfordSteele, Jan 31 2024
  
      
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