Friday, September 7, 2012

Case Studies At Denver Health: 'Patient Dumping' In The Emergency Department Despite EMTALA, The Law That Banned It

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22869653


 2012 Aug;31(8):1749-56.

Case Studies At Denver Health: 'Patient Dumping' In The Emergency Department Despite EMTALA, The Law That Banned It.

Abstract

The Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act was enacted in 1986 to prevent hospitals from turning away patients with emergency medical conditions, often because they were uninsured-a practice commonly known as "patient dumping." Twenty-five years later, Denver Health-a large, urban, safety-net hospital-continues to experience instances in which people with emergency conditions, many of whom are uninsured, end up in the safety-net setting after having been denied care or receiving incomplete care elsewhere. We present five case studies and discuss potential limitations in the oversight and enforcement of the 1986 law. We advocate for a more effective system for reporting and acting on potential violations, as well as clearer standards governing compliance with the law.

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