Thursday, June 25, 2009

Emergency Advocacy

In my first weekly conference as an emergency medicine intern at Yale, we had several lectures. Topics included D-dimer in pulmonary embolism, atrial fibrillation, chest x-ray reading and emergency medicine advocacy. What? Advocacy in the classroom? One of our EM professors is an expert in the subjects of accident prevention policy, so she gave us a primer on what we can do as new doctors to contribute to the current health care debate. Here's the letter I wrote this morning on my day off.

Dear (Insert CT lawmaker name here),

I am a resident physician in the Yale-New Haven Hospital emergency department. I'm writing to tell you a little bit about ER conditions so that you will have a sense of how emergency care is an important issue that should be included in the currently debated health plan. A health care plan in our country cannot be comprehensive if it does not address emergency care.

When I show up for my 12 hour shift at Yale's level one trauma center, I am immediately inundated with an atmosphere that to an outsider could be perceived as chaos. The scene is far from the clean depictions on your television set, and believe me, there is not time for the intrigue that home viewers expect from “Grey's Anatomy.” Every night at many of the top hospitals in this country, patients sit in emergency room hallways for lack of private rooms. It is not unusual for these folks to receive all of their care in the hallway. I will personally wheel patients in and out of rooms so that they may have the dignity of a private exam. It breaks my heart to tell these folks, “We'll only be in here for 10 minutes before I take you back out into the hallway.” Can you imagine your doctor saying, “You have appendicitis and will need surgery, but until then try to make yourself comfortable on this hallway stretcher,” like I have? When you are having the worst pain of your life, you can't understand there is someone sicker than you.

This brings me to the health plan. There are always really sick patients. President Obama has been championing primary care as the centerpiece of his plan; and rightly so: prevention and a steady relationship with one doctor will go far to reduce health care costs. But increasing resources to primary care will not alleviate the overcrowding problems we face in delivering emergency care. For example, with 97% of the population in nearby Massachusetts insured, ER use has increased by nearly 10%. A refrain we physicians wish to emphasize is: coverage does not equal access. Where do people go when they get sick after hours?

I am familiar with and applaud sections 214 and 215 of the current Senate bill (“Systems for Emergency Care...” and “Trauma Centers...” in “Quality, Affordable Health Care for all Americans” submitted by Sen. Reid), and hope you will support these provisions. The grants and mandates are based on recommendations a 2006 Institute of Medicine report and will go far to improve care through one of the most frequent access points for people in need. In the interim, I'll do my part to see as many patients as I can safely handle so that our ER's hallways are used for walking, not patient care.

Sincerely,

Thomas Robey, M.D., Ph.D.

If you are wondering why I don't post more here in the next year, it's because I'll be using my time to write other things. Such as letters like this...

Where's Thomas?

We made it to New Haven and have unpacked most of our boxes. My Facebook friends out there will know that I've finished my orientation week, and have started my orientation month. If there's one thing important about being a resident, it's being oriented...

My posting frequency will be much less this year. I'm afraid I just won't have the time to polish my writing in a way I'd be comfortable presenting to the blogosphere. But I am still writing. And I'll be back. There's still plenty of 'Hope' around. Hopefully I won't lose it through internship!

Monday, June 01, 2009

Shipping Container

By this time tomorrow, the entirety of our belongings, including this desktop computer, will be packed into an 8'x9'x16' space. That excludes clothes, an air mattress, family photos and a few beloved plants. I will spend my REM sleep this evening summoning the requisite packing skills for the job.