Woman waits 19 hours in hospital emergency department
  • JeddHamptonJeddHampton October 2008
    Source Material

    QUOTE
    DALLAS — A woman says she waited 19 hours at Parkland Memorial Hospital's emergency department for treatment of a broken leg and never did get to see a doctor — but still got a bill for $162.

    Amber Joy Milbrodt, who said she broke a bone in her leg while playing volleyball, received the bill two weeks after her Sept. 24 visit.

    Parkland officials say the bill was appropriate because a nurse spent time checking her vital signs to assess her level of need.

    But that's not how Milbrodt sees it. "It should have been more like them paying me for having to sit in the emergency room for 19 hours," she told The Dallas Morning News.

    The assessment by the nurse, which lasted a few minutes, established her place in line that night. By that time, Milbrodt said, she had already been waiting about 3 1/2 hours.

    She still had not been called more than 15 hours later, so she gave up and went home. She an X-ray taken at a chiropractic school where she is a student had already confirmed that she had a fracture.

    "She's not paying for waiting," says Rick Rhine, the hospital's vice president in charge of billing. "She's paying for the assessment she received."

    Milbrodt, 29, who has no insurance, said she does not plan to pay. After leaving the ER, she rested at home for a few days and then put her leg in a brace, which she still wears. It seems to be healing, she said.

    A few days before Milbrodt's visit, a 58-year-old man who went to the ER with stomach pains also waited 19 hours — and then suffered cardiac arrest and died.

    Hospital officials say they need more beds to handle the excessive number of patients who need care. A bond measure on the Nov. 4 ballot would provide funds for a new, larger hospital.

    Fort Worth's large public hospital, John Peter Smith, shares Parkland's policy of charging for a triage assessment. But other hospitals in Dallas, such as Baylor University Medical Center, don't charge if the person never sees a doctor.



    I wouldn't pay either.
  • NunesNunes October 2008
    Good thing we don't have universal healthcare, because then the kind of excellent care we get in America would be completely unavailable.
  • azn+mikeazn mike October 2008
    I hope that family that had the 59 year old woman dying sued the hospital.
  • JeddHamptonJeddHampton October 2008
    In this case Andrew, Universal Health Care wouldn't have done a thing, but perhaps extend her wait (as unthinkable as it seems). The reason that is cited is the lack of rooms, but I'd bank on there not being enough doctors as well. So, in this case, Universal Health Care does nothing for her except pay the retarded bill.
  • NunesNunes October 2008
    QUOTE (Jong @ Oct 22 2008, 11:13 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
    I hope that family that had the 59 year old woman dying sued the hospital.

    It's actually really hard to sue a hospital, despite what Doctors will say. Lawyers who agree to engage in a lawsuit with a hospital usually mean that they are going after a doctor and hoping the hospital will settle. My grandmother developed a heart arrhythmia due to a lack of care following a double bypass surgery. They put her in a maternity ward because the ICU and pulmonary care areas were full. Having midwives and maternity nurses looking after a damn near robotic woman is negligence IMO, but not according to the law.
  • This shit shouldn't happen.
  • BrianBrian October 2008
    And I thought the 4 hour wait for my friend was bad when she had some alcohol related complications. At least that was free!

    <3 Canada
  • TrueBelieverTrueBeliever October 2008
    That is fucking ridiculous. I've been in ERs a couple of times and the nurses do not come to check on your problem, like the article said it is just to get your place in line. I would never pay that bill.
  • NunesNunes October 2008
    QUOTE (True Believer @ Oct 24 2008, 09:09 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
    That is fucking ridiculous. I've been in ERs a couple of times and the nurses do not come to check on your problem, like the article said it is just to get your place in line. I would never pay that bill.


    Yes you would. You'd pay it or go into bankruptcy several years down the road from paying legal fees while the hospital stalled any progress.
    edit: not a slight against you or your conviction, I'm saying we all would. There's not much of a choice in the matter...
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