Hospital topics
-
The Canadian healthcare system consists of provincial- and territorial-based health insurance plans that provide universal-comprehensive coverage for medically necessary hospital and physician services, the public funding of healthcare with no financial-access barriers, and the private delivery of care. A profile of the Canadian system and its expenditures fosters some noteworthy comparisons between Canadian and U. S. healthcare.
-
One city's solution to overcrowded emergency departments and a shortage of beds was the installation of an ambulance-diversion system, whereby ambulances carrying patients with relatively minor injuries were diverted, when necessary, from the city's busy emergency departments to less crowded ones in neighboring counties.
-
Whether it's indigent care, cost containment, transfer laws, financially wary HMOs, overcrowding, reimbursement, or emergency-department inefficiency, the factors "putting the squeeze" on emergency medicine seem to multiply with each new survey. These pressures, the authors feel, are not only weakening the provision of emergency care but also strengthening the argument for a national health plan.