America's ER Docs Warn of Surge in Patients Due to 'Tripledemic'

Doctors pushing emergency stretcher bed in corridor
Doctors pushing emergency stretcher bed in corridorAdobe Stock

Key Takeaways

  • A coalition of health and medical groups has called on the White House to hold a summit on ongoing problems facing U.S. emergency rooms

  • ERs nationwide are clogged with patients waiting for care or hospital beds, and the pileup dovetails with a wave of respiratory infections

  • Flu, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and COVID are all on the rise across the U.S.

FRIDAY, Nov. 11, 2022 (HealthDay News) -- Emergency rooms are clogged with people who are waiting for inpatient beds or other care and it's causing a crisis, according to the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP).

ACEP is one of more than 30 medical, patient advocacy and public health and safety groups who have sent a letter to the White House asking for a summit to work on immediate and long-term solutions.

The problem is urgent as U.S. emergency rooms deal with a "tripledemic" -- the respiratory disease threat of influenza, COVID-19 and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV).

Dubbed "boarding," the problem means too many patients are waiting to be seen by ER doctors, for hospital admission, to return to their nursing home or to be transferred to psychiatric, skilled nursing or other specialized facilities.

"Boarding has been an unresolved, systemic challenge for decades, but it's currently at a level that we've never seen," said ACEP President Dr. Christopher Kang.

"Patients with nowhere else to go are being held in emergency departments for days, weeks, or even months in some cases," he said in an ACEP news release. "Boarding is straining our system, accelerating emergency physician burnout, and putting patients' lives at risk."

ACEP collected more than 100 stories from emergency physicians throughout the United States to illustrate the severe consequences of boarding on emergency care teams and their patients.

Patients deteriorate and sometimes die while waiting to be seen, according to ACEP.

The groups are seeking collective action to help emergency departments address the crisis.

"If the system is already this strained during our 'new normal,' how will emergency departments be able to cope with a sudden surge of patients from a natural disaster, school shooting, mass casualty traffic event or disease outbreak?" the letter to the White House asks.

More information

Yale University has more about the crisis in emergency care.

SOURCE: American College of Emergency Physicians, news release, Nov. 9, 2022

What This Means For You

Be prepared if you go to the emergency room as hospitals are dealing with a wave of respiratory infections that has patients waiting to be seen by a doctor.

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