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Where Americans Get Acute Care: Increasingly, It's Not at Their Doctor's Office

September 2010
Health Affairs, Vol. 29, No. 9
Stephen R. Pitts, Emily Carrier, Eugene C. Rich, Arthur L. Kellermann

Historically, general practitioners provided first-contact care in the United States. Today, however, only 42 percent of the 354 million annual visits for acute care—treatment for newly arising health problems—are made to patients’ personal physicians. The rest are made to emergency departments (28 percent), specialists (20 percent), or outpatient departments (7 percent). Although fewer than 5 percent of doctors are emergency physicians, they handle a quarter of all acute care encounters and more than half of such visits by the uninsured. Health reform provisions in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act that advance patient-centered medical homes and accountable care organizations are intended to improve access to acute care. The challenge for reform will be to succeed in the current, complex acute care landscape.

Access to this article is available at the Health Affairs Web site. (Subscription required.)

 

 

 


 

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The Center for Studying Health System Change Ceased operation on Dec. 31, 2013.