ER Visits Mostly by Medicare, Medicaid Recipients

But government study also shows uninsured accounted for almost 1 out of 5 ER patients

Posted: July 31, 2009

FRIDAY, July 31 (HealthDay News) -- An estimated 50 million, or 42 percent, of the 120 million visits made in 2006 to U.S. hospital emergency departments were billed to the Medicaid and Medicare programs, according to a U.S. government report released Thursday.

Uninsured patients accounted for nearly 18 percent of emergency department visits nationally, 34 percent were billed to private insurance, and 6 percent were billed to worker's compensation, military health plan administrator Tricare, and other payers, according to the latest News and Numbers from the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

Among the other findings:

The study is based on an analysis of data from the 2006 Nationwide Emergency Department Sample, which contains records of emergency department visits from about 1,000 community hospitals nationwide. The hospitals account for 20 percent of all U.S. hospital emergency departments.

More information

The American College of Emergency Physicians explains when patients should go to the emergency department.

Hospital ER use

I disagree with your premise that Seniors use the ER instead of doctor's offices. The ILLEGAL LAW BREAKERS use the ER as a doctor's office, anywhere, anytime, & all the time. Senior's make appointment's with their doctor & follow through. God forbid that this socialized Obamacare passes. It will destroy the United States of America.

GEO of VA @ Jul 31, 2009 16:06:08 PM

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