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Article
Jul 11, 2017
by Paul Taylor

Can user fees help reduce overcrowding in Canadian emergency rooms?

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Question: The news media is full of stories about overcrowded hospital emergency rooms and people waiting a long time for medical treatments. Why don’t we charge a reasonable user fee for medical services? That should reduce the number of people going to doctors needlessly while also raising money for our cash-strapped health care system. It seems like a win-win.

Answer:  You’re not the first person to put forward that proposal and you won’t likely be the last. However, a large body of scientific evidence suggests that user fees are a bad idea when it comes to health care.

It’s true that charging a fee – even a small one – results in fewer people seeking medical care. But it reduces both unnecessary and necessary care – especially among lower income individuals.

That’s a problem because putting off necessary care can lead to worse health down the road. Think of the people who decide to forgo a cancer-screening test because they don’t want to pay a fee – or can’t afford it.

It’s also unrealistic to expect the general public to know what is, or is not, a serious health problem needing prompt attention, says Dr. Michael Schull, an emergency department physician at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre.

He points out that a pain in the chest might be caused by common indigestion or a potentially deadly heart attack. Sometimes it takes a visit to a hospital emergency department to make that determination.

And even a patient who comes with a minor complaint, such as a cough or cold or sprained ankle, “doesn’t actually affect the wait times for other patients who are sicker,” says Schull, who is also a scientist at the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences.

That’s because patients are assessed on arrival through a triage process in which those requiring immediate care are seen right away. Many emergency departments also have an additional system to channel patients into separate treatment paths based on the severity on their conditions. “They are in different streams and have virtually no influence on each other’s wait time,” he says.

In fact, a study co-authored by Schull found that people showing up with minor problems had only a negligible impact on others’ care.

The study looked at more than four million patient visits at 110 emergency departments across Ontario.

The results revealed that for each low-complexity patient who arrives, the remaining patients experience an increased length of stay of just 32 seconds on average, and an increase in time to be treated by a physician of 13 seconds.

Of course, there are very real concerns about certain wait times in Canada’s health-care system. But those issues are complex and relate to serious cases that are not affected by some people going to emergency departments with minor ailments.

Schull says user fees for medical services would simply penalize vulnerable low-income individuals who often have greater need of healthcare services.

Dr. Danielle Martin, a family physician and vice-president at Women’s College Hospital in Toronto, agrees.

In her book – Better Now: Six Big Ideas to Improve Health Care For All Canadians – she calls user fees “Health Care Zombies” because support for them doesn’t seem to die despite ample evidence they don’t achieve their desired results.

“When user fees prevent patients from seeking necessary care, people end up suffering complications that are much more expensive to treat,” she says.

To make matters worse, they don’t actually raise much money, once the administrative costs are taken into account.

“You need someone to collect the fee, someone to chase after the person who still owes the fee, and someone to determine who should be exempt from the fee,” Martin explains. “By the time you’ve put in place the army of bean counters, you’re running a bureaucracy to pay for itself.”

She points to a study that was done in 2010 when the Quebec provincial government was considering a $25 charge per medical visit. It would have been paid as a lump sum when people filed their end-of-year taxes, an approach designed to minimize administrative overhead. (The very poor were to be exempt.)

The study found that the potential revenue was small – representing less than 1 per cent of the $27-billion public health care budget in Quebec.

“That shows if you actually want to raise money to pay for the health care system, you’ll need to charge pretty hefty user fees,” Martin says.

Overall, a user fee “is a blame-the-patient approach that’s based on the assumption people are abusing the health-care system,” Schull says.

“I have been doing emergency medicine for 30 years and it’s my experience that only a tiny minority of patients inappropriately seek care and that proportion has been getting smaller over time.”

In most cases, “patients simply don’t know what’s wrong” with them or they can’t get a timely appointment with a family physician. “I have no problem with these patients coming to my emerg,” Schull says.

Sunnybrook’s Patient Navigation Advisor provides advice and answers questions from patients and their families. His blog, Personal Health Navigator, is reprinted on Healthy Debate with the kind permission of Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre. Follow Paul on Twitter @epaultaylor.

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Author

Paul Taylor

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Paul Taylor is a health journalist and former Patient Navigation Advisor at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, where he provided advice and answered questions from patients and their families. Paul will continue to write occasional columns for Healthy Debate.

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1 Comment
  • Yvonne says:
    July 15, 2017 at 10:59 am

    You lost me at “cash strapped health care system.” People go to the E.R. because they can’t access primary care and specialists in a timely manner. Allow people to buy a private option and the system would be more efficient. Right now, family doctors in family health teams are paid not to be in the office so they work at three different clinics. We are not getting value for all of the money that is poured into healthcare.

Author

Paul Taylor

Contributor

Paul Taylor is a health journalist and former Patient Navigation Advisor at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, where he provided advice and answered questions from patients and their families. Paul will continue to write occasional columns for Healthy Debate.

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