Press Releases

Kuster Leads Letter to Reduce Emergency Department Wait Times in New Hampshire

**Median emergency room wait times have increased nearly 16% since 2014**

 

Concord N.H. — Congresswoman Annie Kuster (NH-02) led 25 of her colleagues from both sides of the aisle in sending a letter to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) urging action to evaluate and alleviate overcrowding, improper utilization, and long wait times in emergency departments across the country. This letter comes as emergency wait times in New Hampshire are on the rise, with Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center’s emergency department hitting its patient capacity and being overcrowded for weeks. This letter was co-led by Reps. Michael Burgess (R-TX), Brad Schneider (D-IL), and Darin LaHood (R-IL) and co-signed by Rep. Chris Pappas (NH-01).

 

“According to CMS’s most recently released data in 2022, the median time patients spend in emergency rooms was 2 hours, 40 minutes nationwide which is up from 2 hours, 18 minutes in 2014,” the Members wrote. “While the structural causes of these issues include understaffing, lack of available hospital beds, and limited access to primary care, inappropriate use of emergency services has been specifically identified as a significant driver. Overcrowding in emergency departments contributes to healthcare staff burnout, poor clinical outcomes, excessive costs, and medical errors.”  

 

The Members continued, “Despite growing acknowledgment of the challenges caused by overcrowding in emergency rooms, few efforts to mitigate this problem have been successful. Resolving these issues will require significant public and private investment, and we believe that urgent care centers (UCC) are an easily accessible resource that can reduce crowding by providing treatment to non-emergency patients in a more appropriate setting.”

 

This letter was also signed by Reps. Steve Scalise (R-LA), Joe Wilson (R-SC), Jenniffer González-Colón (R-PR), Don Bacon (R-NE), Aaron Bean (R-FL), Garret Graves (R-LA), Adrian Smith (R-NE), Donald Davis (D-NC), Jill Tokuda (D-HI), Paul Tonko (D-NY), Chris Pappas (D-NH), Deborah Ross (D-NC), David Trone (D-MD), Vern Buchanan (R-FL), Debbie Dingell (D-MI), Chuck Fleischmann (R-TN), Juan Ciscomani (R-AZ), Andy Harris (R-MD), Carol Miller (R-WV), Kevin Kiley (R-CA), Jefferson Van Drew (R-NJ), and Sean Casten (D-IL). 

 

The full letter is printed below and linked here.

 

Dear Administrator Brooks-LaSure: 

 

We write to highlight the need for CMS to evaluate options to address overcrowding, improper utilization, and long wait times in emergency departments and to express our desire to work together to find solutions. According to CMS’s most recently released data in 2022, the median time patients spend in emergency rooms was 2 hours, 40 minutes nationwide which is up from 2 hours, 18 minutes in 2014. 

 

While the structural causes of these issues include understaffing, lack of available hospital beds, and limited access to primary care, inappropriate use of emergency services has been specifically identified as a significant driver. Overcrowding in emergency departments contributes to healthcare staff burnout, poor clinical outcomes, excessive costs, and medical errors. Despite growing acknowledgment of the challenges caused by overcrowding in emergency rooms, few efforts to mitigate this problem have been successful. Resolving these issues will require significant public and private investment, and we believe that urgent care centers (UCC) are an easily accessible resource that can reduce crowding by providing treatment to non-emergency patients in a more appropriate setting. 

 

An overwhelming amount of scholarship and research supports treating non-emergency patients in UCCs. A 2019 report by the Medicare Payment Advisory Committee found that one-third (500,000) of nonurgent ED claims could be appropriately treated in an UCC at a third of the cost. Further, a 2019 National Bureau of Economic Research study found that up to half of the annual 137 million ED visits could be treated at a less-emergent facility.  

 

UCCs can manage a wide variety of less-emergent conditions that overwhelm emergency departments, including allergic reactions, lacerations, sprains and fractures, common respiratory illnesses (e.g., flu or RSV), and bacterial infections (e.g., strep throat, urinary tract infections or foodborne illness). In addition to having specific staffing and medical equipment, UCCs also have longer operating hours and wider geographic access than physician offices. 

 

Expanded knowledge of and access to UCCs would provide patients with high-quality care for non-emergent needs that is both more affordable and has shorter wait times than care provided in emergency departments. This would both improve patient outcomes and provide increased capacity for emergency department clinicians to do what they do best – care for high acuity illnesses and injuries.  

 

To reduce costs and wait times, and improve patient outcomes, CMS should explore policy options in the FY2025 Physician Fee Schedule (PFS) to encourage Medicare beneficiaries and Medicaid enrollees to utilize UCCs for non-emergent, urgent care needs. We also request that CMS officials provide a staff-level briefing for the Members signed onto this letter detailing the policy options within six months of receipt of this letter.  

 

We look forward to working with you to better address this issue so Medicare beneficiaries can receive care in the most appropriate setting for their health needs, whether that be an emergency department or an urgent care center. 

 

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