To repeat myself, theose things should fall under the role of the primary care physician. If it isn't being done, get a new GP, don't redesign ERs. What is being described is not an ER, it is a geriatric outreach, social services and respite center.
I have to disagree with this.
The GP system in the US is broken beyond repair.
I could not possibly hope to describe the extent of it here, and all the halfassed measures to plug the leaks are largely a waste of money that just complicates the problem rather than simplify it.
But let's have a small look shall we?
The elderly have no money. So paying out of pocket for care is basically out. Even with Medicare/medicade the deductables and copay is often inhibitory.
Then there is transportation. Rather the lack of it. Often the elderly don't actually meet the bed confined criteria to have the local IFT transport them to the doctor. So they are going to have to pay for that.
Not to mention buy medications and pay for medicare part D. Oh, and food on the table, heat/cooling, electric, and all those things that keep going up higher than their "fixed" income. (fixed like a dog maybe)
Lack of mobility, lack of money inhibit access to care. But 911 to the ED for primary care is very accessable.
For years probably decades the ED has morphed as the center for primary care. Mostly out of need than design. However, the available treatments and knowledge to properly provide primary care had not evolved along with the mission.
Then there is the midlevel provider making things harder and adding completely unnecessary cost. Somehow find the money/transportation to go to your local NP/PA which generates all kinds of administrative costs to be refered to a doctor when you don't fit the protocol. Now you have to pay and find transportation to this doctor. Who doesn't know anything about you at all. Has to work you up from the start, with not only diagnostics but administrative costs.
Even if you go to the doctor first. If you can get an appointment before you wind up in the ED, often times to even stay economically afloat these doctors have thousands of patients. So many they can't even remember what medications you are on or need refilling many times. Health promotion/prevention out of the question in your 8 minute appointment. If you can find one that has an opening for a new patient. Most also do not have diagnostics in house. Compounding the transportation problems.
After primary care looks at you, you are often on your way to a specialist, which is going to put the exact same burdons on the patient as the other previous providers. Especially when they are managed by 4+ specialists none of which are proficent at being a PCP because all they learned was their specialty.
Now let's think about the actuall doctor's office. Small, uncomfortable chairs. No food, possibly some water, inadequete restroom facilities for the need. Fill out the 6 point font forms that even my hyper accute vision can barely read about things they don't understand. Sit for hours in chairs that cut off circulation to their lower extremities, cause pain in their kyphotic spines, and then there is the stress of the actual rushed meeting with the doctor. Concluded with leaving more afraid, confused, and with more economic nd transport concerns. Probably with a rapid fire list of instructions they don't understand and highly stressed that they will be yanked from their homes and be institutionalized as soon as some 30 year old figures it will be easier to fill out the referal to social services because they can't take care of their "basic needs" in the effort of expiditing "better care."
Now in all of this, there is no continuum of care and despite the BS propaganda that technology is somehow going to solve the issue of this lack of continuity and fix everything is just that, BS. Another American attempt to solve the problem by throwing technology at it rather than actual hire more people and reduce the wasteful excesses in the system.
Simple systems work better. The ED attached to a hospital is the better answer. A ride to and from provided. All diagnostics available. Need tests over time or have it all done at the 1 stop shop. Spend the night. Have some nurses take care of basic needs like bathing which is often difficult at home. Perhaps a nutritionist to plan your meals for you. A physical therapist to teach and coach some excercise. 1 set of papers. 1 computer system. Doctors come to you.
So come to the ED. If you can be maintained or problem solved and discharged, perfect. Need 10 specialists? On site. Not perfect but better coordinated care.
Cheaper? Better? Yes
The way things were done in 1970? No.
Welcome to 2011.