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Rationing and the Role of the Emergency Department as Society's Safety Net
Author(s) -
Glauser Jonathan
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
academic emergency medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.221
H-Index - 124
eISSN - 1553-2712
pISSN - 1069-6563
DOI - 10.1111/j.1553-2712.2001.tb01123.x
Subject(s) - rationing , mandate , medicine , obligation , health care , emergency department , population , safety net , medical emergency , public relations , nursing , law , environmental health , political science
Emergency medicine has an integral role in the establishment of universal access to health care for all persons living in the United States. Currently, emergency departments provide the only unfunded mandate available to millions of American residents who otherwise have no access to health care coverage. Any effort to establish universal care must accept health care rationing as a basic principle, and establish a minimum standard of benefits to which all human beings are entitled in this country. People and employers should be allowed to purchase additional care based on their willingness and ability to pay, but under no circumstances should anyone be denied a basic package of health care benefits. Emergency care must be part of those basic benefits. Emergency medicine charges should be structured so that they are not unduly onerous to society, and should reflect true expenses, including marginal costs for nonurgent care. Emergency physicians (EPs) and hospital administrations should recognize their critical role in serving society in roles that are not strictly medical, and allocate resources to benefit the general population in the greatest way. This role will be expanded to include preventive care, to provide for basic pharmacologic coverage as needed, and to provide necessary immunizations when traditional primary care has failed. We have a moral obligation to recognize that resources are limited and to allocate them so as to benefit the greatest number of patients in the greatest way. As members of the medical profession best equipped to assume such a task, it is incumbent upon EPs to act as advocates to the public to enable us to fulfill this mission.

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