Joey_V
Well-known member
A true sign of the times, everybody.
As a background, I work at Cook County ED - we have 3 separate ERs: green, blue, and red (each with increasing severity). The normal number in the waiting room is approximately 60.
Yesterday, it me and another resident plus the attending (our Chair) in the blue team. We had 60 waiting in the BLUE team ALONE!! I counted and there were 160 waiting in the 3 ERs combined!!!!
We POUNDED through the patients and got through about 25 patients on our team.... my hand was on the verge of carpal tunnel, so much documentation. Still there were nearly 50 in the blue WR at the end of my shift (add in the newcomers).... barely made a dent. Not only that, but we have a STAGNATION of beds, we lack the space upstairs to send the admitted to! So we have placed patients in hallways awaiting their rooms!!
Every other patient I have now has a story about losing a job and insurance - previously seen in private hospital institutions. It doesn't help that University of Chicago is triaging patients away from their facilities and they end up ultimately at my doorstep.
And what's this I hear about Obama cutting medicare? How do we get reimbursed properly?
If this continues, I don't have any idea how our hospital (the handbasket for the uninsured in Chicago) can survive.
We've run out of viscous lidocaine... what's next??
As a background, I work at Cook County ED - we have 3 separate ERs: green, blue, and red (each with increasing severity). The normal number in the waiting room is approximately 60.
Yesterday, it me and another resident plus the attending (our Chair) in the blue team. We had 60 waiting in the BLUE team ALONE!! I counted and there were 160 waiting in the 3 ERs combined!!!!
We POUNDED through the patients and got through about 25 patients on our team.... my hand was on the verge of carpal tunnel, so much documentation. Still there were nearly 50 in the blue WR at the end of my shift (add in the newcomers).... barely made a dent. Not only that, but we have a STAGNATION of beds, we lack the space upstairs to send the admitted to! So we have placed patients in hallways awaiting their rooms!!
Every other patient I have now has a story about losing a job and insurance - previously seen in private hospital institutions. It doesn't help that University of Chicago is triaging patients away from their facilities and they end up ultimately at my doorstep.
And what's this I hear about Obama cutting medicare? How do we get reimbursed properly?
If this continues, I don't have any idea how our hospital (the handbasket for the uninsured in Chicago) can survive.
We've run out of viscous lidocaine... what's next??
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