Exactly, 1986.billy.pilgrim wrote: ↑Wed Apr 08, 2020 8:07 amI've had a similar experience after a hospital was incorrectly informed that I didn't have insurance, but never with ER or nurses. As I remember, it was hospital administrators that would order the dumping of nonpaying patients in back alleys. The practice was so bad that even the Republicans like Reagan stepped up to sign legislation to end it - back in the 80s, yet I had a similar experience after my big insurance company told the hospital that I didn't have insurance. After that things got real strange.
Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act
Occasionally a hospital is still caught dumping uninsured patients to the street. More common is transferring them from a private hospital to a public one under some pretext. However, this happens with indigent patients with chronic, expensive and non-life threatening conditions, not with people on the verge of dying, like Ulysses thinks is routine and even more deplorably thinks should be routine.
A couple of personal examples:
Another nurse that could only hear part of my triaging thought that I had discouraged a Latino patient with a sore throat from being seen. She reported my potential EMTALA violation to the ED manager. In fact, the patient was accompanied by a family member and a translator that the other nurse did not know about. He was drunk and it turns out that he had thrown up, hence the sore throat. I did not discourage care at all, but after the full story was known all of them decided not to seek it. Issue resolved and the complaining nurse apologized to me.
An ER MD at a receiving hospital called and berated me about not sending the paperwork with a transferred patient and spat out that he was going to report my EMTALA violation. In fact, I had faxed it per protocol and the fault laid with the receiving hospital's Medical Records Dept. My boss sorted it out. The ER MD never apologized.
This is how seriously we take EMTALA over somewhat minor stuff. Anyone suggesting that we discriminate in emergent lifesaving situations is ignorant. Anyone saying that we should discriminate in favor of their insured ass in a lifesaving situation is a dick.