Freestanding emergency rooms are changing the way Texas and the nation take care of their health. Boasting greater convenience and easier access, they give patients more options when it comes to finding acute care. Despite their growing popularity, misconceptions are plentiful. Case in point: Many people believe freestanding ERs are no different than urgent care centers.
It’s time to dispel that myth.
For decades, healthcare experts and casual observers have noticed a gap between hospital-based emergency rooms and urgent care centers. Before freestanding emergency rooms came into the picture, your average patient had only two options: Go to a hospital and wait in a long line to see a rushed doctor or go to an urgent care center and risk not getting the necessary treatment.
People with serious, acute conditions and people who needed help after hours had only one choice: wait in the hospital to eventually see a rushed doctor. Hence, the need for freestanding emergency rooms.
Freestanding emergency centers are, in many ways, just like traditional emergency centers. There’s only one difference: They’re not connected to a hospital. They’re independently owned and operated, yet regulated by the state of Texas.
Of course, with official sanction comes official oversight. Before it can open its doors to the public, a freestanding emergency room must first obtain a license from the state. In order to do so, it has to comply with a number of state regulations.
For starters, freestanding ERs are required to offer many of the same services and have the same equipment as traditional ERs. They must also meet many of the same standards. They must stay open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. They must keep licensed physicians on staff around the clock. Their doctors and nurses must be thoroughly trained. They must have the equipment and medication necessary to treat a range of potentially serious medical conditions.
They must also be capable of offering immediate, lifesaving care no matter the time of the day or the day of the week. Since they’re not connected to a hospital, they can’t admit critically ill patients or perform surgery, but they can easily transfer patients to a facility of their choice that does.
Those higher standards are what separate freestanding emergency centers from urgent care centers. Freestanding ERs have all the capabilities of a fully equipped hospital emergency department. They provide the same level of care, the same quality of care, and the same round-the-clock access.
Urgent care centers don’t. They close their doors at night. They are often staffed by physician assistants and nursing assistants rather than ER-trained doctors and RNs. They typically lack advanced imaging equipment like CT scans, x-rays, and ultrasound technology. They rarely carry medicines that are used to treat grave conditions. All told, they offer limited diagnostics, limited treatment, and limited access.
Urgent care centers can:
Freestanding Emergency Rooms like The Emergency Center are able to:
There’s another common misconception floating around regarding cost. Because people tend to confuse freestanding ERs with urgent care centers, they mistakenly believe that a freestanding ER must cost the same as an urgent care center.
The truth is that urgent care centers can get away with charging less for the services provided. The reason is simple: With limited operating hours, no physician staffing requirements, no advanced imaging equipment, and fewer prescriptions medications to offer, they face lower overhead and administrative costs.
On the other hand, patients who suffer from a serious medical condition may face double costs if they’re transferred to a local hospital because the urgent care center can’t handle their needs.
Since stand-alone ERs provide the same level of care as hospital ERs, their charges are the same, if not a little less. The good news is that facilities like The Emergency Center in Texas honors most private and commercial insurance plans. At this time, Freestanding ER’s do not accept Medicaid, Medicare, Tricare or other government insurances. Any patient who has these types of insurance will never be turned away, but the charges will be billed at a reduced, self-pay rate.
At the end of the day, it comes down to the level of care provided. Freestanding ERs provide more comprehensive and higher quality services than urgent care facilities. The costs reflect that reality.
There are some cases when an urgent care center may be the first choice—for example, if someone is suffering from a minor cut or illness. More serious concerns require superior care. Going to an urgent care center for such an emergency can waste time, and that can be dangerous.
You should go to an urgent care center when:
You should go to a freestanding ER when:
You should go to a traditional ER when:
The driving force behind the idea of a freestanding emergency room is the desire to fix the overburdened ER system. Your average emergency room is hopelessly crowded. Patients have to wait in long lines to see a doctor, a nurse, or even a nurse’s aide. Urgent care centers can’t act as substitutes for fully fledged ERs. They simply don’t provide the appropriate diagnostics and necessary treatments.
Freestanding ERs offer the same level of treatment, without the excessive delay. They expedite care. They give patients more options and, therefore, more control over their healthcare. They also help to relieve the burden on local hospital ERs and urgent care centers by providing an alternative to patients who might otherwise go to the same place at the same time.
That helps everyone—people with serious conditions who need immediate treatment; people with minor conditions who don’t want to wait for hours on end; doctors who are rushed and unable provide adequate care to each of their patients; and administrators who face an increasingly untenable workload. At the end of the day, freestanding ERs are doing their part to improve healthcare in America.
The Emergency Center operates a freestanding emergency room. Our experienced, licensed physicians and registered nurses can see, diagnose, and treat patients at fraction of the time. The Emergency Center is more comprehensive than an urgent care center, and more efficient than a hospital-affiliated ER.
If you or someone you know needs rapid critical care, drive to your nearest freestanding emergency room as soon as possible. Learn more about The Emergency Center’s advantages here.
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The Emergency Center
San Antonio
11320 Alamo Ranch Pkwy
San Antonio, TX 78253
Phone: 210-485-3644
Conroe
4019 I-45 N,
Conroe, Texas 77304
Phone: 936-247-9457
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