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Hospital ERs begin taking reservations

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By contrast, the much larger Rush University Medical Center sees only about two-thirds that number in its new emergency department, and that’s after its new West Side facility fueled a 17.5 percent bump in 2012.

Dr. Dino Rumoro, chairman of the emergency department at Rush, said he has no plans to post wait times, largely because he fears such policies could dissuade patients who need immediate care from going to a hospital.

“I’m waiting to hear of that one patient who thinks he’s having indigestion, considers coming in but sees the wait times are too long, takes some Mylanta, and someone finds him the next day at home dead,” he said.

“I don’t like that idea,” Rumoro said of publicizing wait times. “I think it’s dangerous, and I don’t think it sends the right message.”

He is, however, warming to the idea of allowing people to make appointments in the emergency department because it could help the hospital better manage patient volumes by allowing those who don’t require critical care to select time slots when demand is low. But Rumoro said any such system would need to include a proven mechanism to divert patients with potentially fatal conditions.

Administrators who use online reservations said they made sure such a mechanism was built into their system. Adrienne Seloover, director of emergency and trauma services at St. Alexius, said the hospital’s website directs patients with life-threatening symptoms to the nearest emergency room. A person who uses key words such as “chest pain” on the online appointment form triggers an alert that advises calling 911 or going to the closest ER, she said.

“All of our charge nurses have been trained in the system and review every registration that comes through our system,” Seloover said. “If there is anything questionable about the patient’s symptoms, we call the patient at home to get additional information.”

Hospital administrators say they are trying to meet the needs of patients seeking care.

Dr. Tom Scaletta, medical director of emergency services at Edward’s Naperville emergency department, said some patients have told staff that they left other emergency rooms to go to Edward because they checked and saw that wait times were shorter there. About a quarter of the hospital’s admissions come through the ER.

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