Public health reports
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Public health reports · Jul 1977
Implementation of legislative requirements for emergency medical services in prepaid group practice organizations.
The Health Maintenance Organization Act of 1973, the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems Act of 1973, and other laws are examined for their effects on the organization and management of emergency services in prepaid group practice plans (PPGP). The study was conducted in 1974-75 by the Group Health Association of America. The data were gathered through interviews with administrators and providers of seven PPGPs and with leaders of health planning agencies in the same communities, as well as through reviews of internal documents and a 1-month utilization survey of emergency and urgent care services in each PPGP. ⋯ As a result, the utilization of expensive emergency care must be carefully controlled, and this restraint is often accomplished by requirements specifying which health problems are appropriate for the provision of emergency care, rather than by delaying assistance until the plan's office hours. The furtherance of the PPGP concept, that the entire health care of the individual person is provided and financed by one organization, definancedby one organization, detracts from the viability of a central body charged with the coordination of the delivery of all emergency services in the community. It results not only in duplication of effort but often in the establishment of potentially antagoistic organizations.
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The results of a survey of 10,200 visits to 11 Boston hospital emergency rooms during a 9-day period in March 1972 are presented. The survey was designed to provide data on emergency room use to permit more informed planning by public agencies concerned with improving areawide emergency medical services. The 11 institutions surveyed provided virtually all of the emergency medical services in the city of Boston. ⋯ Of those arriving by ambulance, only 35 percent were classified as emergencies. The survey data reinforce the conclusion that major planning efforts should be concentrated on the management of the nonemergency patient. The data also emphasize the need for a single agency to be responsible for overall planning for emergency medical services on an area wide basis.