Bill M. is a 22-year
old college student who has had asthma and diabetes since he was a child. He
comes in with trouble breathing because he has no primary care doctor and is
out of his inhalers. While he’s in the E.R., he also says that his diabetes
hasn’t been followed for years, and now his blood sugars are out of control and
he has new problems with his kidneys and his eyes.
Rani K. is a 46-year old
who moved from India to take a research position. She has had dark stools for a
month, and now feels intermittently lightheaded. Her blood counts are borderline
low. She needs an endoscopy and further testing—tests that can be done as an
outpatient, but she gets admitted because she has no primary care doctor and
the wait for to see a new one is 103 days.
Annie K. is a 35-year
mother of three who has an infection in her leg that will probably get better
with antibiotics, but will need to get checked by a practitioner in two days.
Her doctor does not have an appointment for a month, so she is told to come
back to the E.R. for a wound check. Even with insurance, each ER visit will
cost her $250.
I am an emergency physician. These are real stories of
patients I see in the E.R. Patients like Bill come in with severe complications
of problems that can be prevented or managed—if they had a primary care doctor
to follow-up with. Patients like Rani who get admitted to the hospital or like
Annie who get told to return because they need urgent follow-up—but have no primary
care doctor available to them.
The dearth of primary care physicians is a serious problem
facing the U.S. healthcare system. The deficit for doctors is astounding, with
a predicted shortage of 100,000 physicians by 2020. This shortage is
particularly acute in primary care fields and in underserved areas. The reasons
are multifactorial, and have to do with historical policies limiting physician
workforce as well as ongoing problems with reimbursement, lifestyle, and
service inclination.
We emergency physicians will always treat all-comers to our
E.R.s to the best of our abilities. Emergency physicians are a creative bunch,
and already, we have created value in areas of greatest need, for example, with
pioneering observation medicine units and starting urgent-care follow-up
clinics. Still, we as a society need to recognize that to deliver really
excellent medical care, we must ensure a robust primary care system, and take
steps to strengthen our existing primary care infrastructure through
coordinating and task-shifting medical care, reconsidering payment and
incentives, and realigning medical education with societal need. Primary care
is the backbone of our society, and here in the E.R., we see why it is so
urgently needed, every single day.