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Ill. hospitals expand reach with stand-alone ERs

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In contrast, free-standing emergency centers are staffed around the clock. They can handle many life-threatening emergencies, although patients who need surgery and other complex procedures are transferred to full-service hospitals. They generally are equipped with imaging tools such as CT scanners and MRI machines.

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois spokesman Michael Deering said free-standing ERs “demand significantly higher reimbursement rates from insurers than an urgent care clinic or a retail clinic because they bill for costly facility fees that urgent and retail clinics do not.”

Deering is worried patients will be confused about where they should seek care.

Hospital leaders counter that patients usually know when they need an ER and when they need urgent care.

The Illinois health planning board will decide which hospital system – if any – will get a permit for the Frankfort facility. Hospitals nearby are worried a competing ER would siphon away nurses and contribute to a staffing shortage.

Hospitals nationally have been using free-standing ERs to attract patients in prosperous suburbs with growing, well-insured populations, said Emily Carrier, co-author of a 2012 study on hospital expansion and a senior health researcher at the nonpartisan Center for Studying Health System Change in Washington, D.C.

Free-standing emergency rooms cost less to build than full-service hospitals, she said, but hospitals can charge the same rates and transfer patients into their main hospitals.

“This is another tool that hospitals can use to grow. You can locate a free-standing emergency department in a community where you’d like to have a presence,” Carrier said. “It’s a way to get patients into the doors of your system.”

Another study found that most free-standing ERs are in urban areas, even though they originally were conceived as a solution for rural areas with no hospitals nearby.

Illinois law says each free-standing emergency department must be in a city with a population of no more 50,000. It must be staffed 24 hours a day by at least one board-certified emergency doctor. It must have an ambulance that can take patients to a full-service hospital if necessary. It must be owned by a hospital system and can’t be marketed as a hospital emergency department.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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