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Title Regionalizing emergency care : workshop summary / Ben Wheatley, rapporteur ; Board on Health Care Services, Institute of Medicine of the National Academies.

Publication Info. Washington, D.C. : National Academies Press, [2010]
©2010

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (166 pages) : illustrations (some color).
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Series Future of emergency care
Future of emergency care series.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references.
Contents Workshop introduction -- Regionalized trauma care: past, present, and future -- Emerging models of regionalization -- Lesson from other systems -- Regionalization: potential and pitfalls -- Governance and accountability -- Financing -- Data and communications -- Preparedness -- Wrap-up discussion with federal partners.
Summary "During medical emergencies, hospital staff and emergency medical services (EMS) providers, can face barriers in delivering the fastest and best possible care. Overcrowded emergency rooms cannot care for patients as quickly as necessary, and some may divert ambulances and turn away new patients outright. In many states, ambulance staff lacks the means to determine which hospitals can provide the best care to a patient. Given this absence of knowledge, they bring patients to the closest hospital. In addition, because emergency service providers from different companies compete with each other for patients, and emergency care legislation varies from state to state, it is difficult to establish the necessary local, interstate, and national communication and collaboration to create a more efficient system. In 2006, the IOM recommended that the federal government implement a regionalized emergency care system to improve cooperation and overcome these challenges. In a regionalized system, local hospitals and EMS providers would coordinate their efforts so that patients would be brought to hospitals based on the hospitals' capacity and expertise to best meet patients' needs. In September 2009, three years after making these recommendations, the IOM held a workshop sponsored by the federal Emergency Care Coordination Center to assess the nation's progress toward regionalizing emergency care. The workshop brought together policymakers and stakeholders, including nurses, EMS personnel, hospital administrators, and others involved in emergency care. Participants identified successes and shortcomings in previous regionalization efforts; examined the many factors involved in successfully implementing regionalization; and discussed future challenges to regionalizing emergency care. This document summarizes the workshop."--Home page.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Emergency medical services -- United States -- Management.
Emergency medical services.
United States.
Management.
Emergency medicine -- United States -- Management.
Emergency medicine.
Emergency management -- United States.
Emergency management.
Hospitals -- Emergency services.
Hospitals -- Emergency services.
Emergency Medical Services -- organization & administration.
Emergency Service, Hospital -- organization & administration.
Emergency Medicine -- organization & administration.
Health Policy.
United States.
Genre/Form Congress.
Electronic books.
Electronic texts.
Added Author Wheatley, Ben.
Institute of Medicine (U.S.). Planning Committee on Regionalizing Emergency Care Service.
Note At head of title: Future of emergency care
Other Form: Print version: Wheatley, Ben. Regionalizing emergency care. Washington, D.C. : National Academies Press, ©2010 9780309151511 (OCoLC)612335764
ISBN 9780309151528 (electronic book)
030915152X (electronic book)
1282644890
9781282644892
0309151511
9780309151511