How the COVID-19 pandemic has adversely affected the economics of U.S. emergency care

This article has 1 evaluations Published on
Read the full article Related papers
This article on Sciety

Abstract

Objective

We describe how the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic impacted emergency department (ED) economics, acuity, and staffing.

Methods

We conducted an observational study of visits during January to September 2020 compared to 2019 in 136 EDs staffed by a national emergency medicine group. We created ratios of three-week moving averages for 2020 visits, acuity, costs divided by 2019 moving averages, by age and ED size. We tabulated reductions in clinician hours and FTEs compared to early 2020 staffing.

Results

2020-2019 ED visit ratios declined in March nadiring mid-April for both adults (to 0.60) and children (to 0.30) and rose thereafter but remained below 2019 levels through September 2020. The ratio of adult RVUs/visit rose to 1.1 for adults and 1.2 for children in the early pandemic, falling to 1.04 and 1.1 through September. The ratio of direct salary expenses in freestanding (FSED) and small EDs declined less dramatically than in medium and large EDs. Clinical revenues in medium and large EDs declined more sharply and recovered slowly but plateaued well below 2019 levels. By September 2020, expenses were still higher than revenues for small EDs, similar for FSEDs, and somewhat higher for medium and large EDs. During the pandemic, physician hours fell 15% and APP hours 27% during COVID-19 translating to 174 lost physician and 193 lost APP FTEs.

Conclusion

The COVID-19 pandemic reduced ED visits and increased acuity in the first 7 months of the pandemic, leading to a contraction of the ED workforce, and threatening ED economics, more so in small and FSEDs.

Related articles

Related articles are currently not available for this article.