Hang on a minute there. You're exhausted, and Cameron's sick, but....is this really an emergency?
Problems that the ER is best equipped to handle include:
- Severe cuts or lacerations
- A head or neck injury with loss of consciousness or vomiting
- An altered mental state: either a decrease in the level of consciousness or excessive sleepiness or having uncontrollable agitated behavior
- Severe burns of all types, including chemical and electrical burns, especially on the face
- Poisoning, caused by ingesting dangerous chemicals or medications
- Convulsions lasting more than 15 minutes or any unexpected convulsions
- A serious animal bite which has broken the skin
- Difficulty in breathing, uncontrollable choking, or turning blue around the lips
- Stopping breathing or the pulse stopping
- Signs of shock, including pale, cold clammy skin and a weak and rapid pulse
- Severe headache accompanied with vomiting or stiff neck.
We understand that when your child becomes ill unexpectedly, sometimes it seems like a crisis. It would be great to be able to walk to an ER 24 hours a day and see a doctor right away to reassure you that everything's ok. But your own pediatrician's office, who knows your child and has access to your child's medical record, is just a phone call away. It's so important to us that your child's record be complete that we've made our ER policy part of our new patient brochure.
- The ER can be a scary place for kids. Victims of gunshot wounds, mentally ill patients, drug overdoses, etc. also go to the ER. If those patients are getting cared for in the next room, the sounds and smells can frighten your child.
- Unless your child is very sick, it can be very slow. Heart attacks and strokes have to take priority over fevers and earaches. Usually, young children end up waiting around. This is rough for any toddler, especially a fussy one.
- The cost is much higher to visit the ER than a doctor's office. Because the ER has to have so much staff and specialized equipment ready to go 24 hours a day, the ER has to charge 3-4 times what an office visit costs. Insurance companies don't like this very much. In fact, your insurance company may charge you as much as $100 if they think your ER visit wasn't appropriate. Even if you don't have an ER copay, you still pay indirectly with more tax dollars and higher insurance premiums.
- The ER doesn't have your child's medical history on file. Without access to your medical record, the ER staff may need you to recite your child's entire previous medical history in order to figure out what's going on. They may have to repeat blood tests and studies that would be unnecessary if a doctor familiar with your child was there.
- It may not save you time in the long run. Even if you do go to the ER at 2 am and get a prescription for an ear infection, will the pharmacy be open to fill it? Your time might be better spent at home getting the fever down and making your child comfortable in her own bed until our office opens in the morning.
Also, don't worry about "bothering" the doctor with a phone call about an urgent problem. You're not a bother -- you're child is our patient! Besides, if it's really an emergency, your child's doctor does need to know about it.
Last updated 06/08/09
