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Ill. hospitals expand reach with stand-alone ERs

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This Jan. 9 photo shows the magnetic resonance imaging machine at Silver Cross Emergency Care Center in Homer Glen. The hospital's freestanding emergency center has been in operation since 2009. The convenience of 24-hour emergency care may be coming to more Illinois communities as hospitals make plans to build stand-alone ERs up to 50 miles from their flagship facilities. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

CHICAGO – One recent evening after office hours, Dr. James Magee got a phone call about a patient, a woman in her 40s. She complained of tingling on one side of her body, in her arm and leg. Could it be a stroke?

Magee told the woman's husband to rush her to the free-standing emergency room downstairs from his office in the Chicago suburb of Homer Glen. He told the man: "This is not something that can afford to wait."

The convenience of 24-hour emergency care may be coming to more Illinois communities as hospitals make plans to build stand-alone ERs up to 50 miles from their flagship facilities.

For hospital executives, it's a way to expand turf, compete for patients and prepare for an aging population and more Americans gaining insurance under the federal health overhaul law. For families who live far from a hospital, stand-alone emergency rooms provide the comfort of knowing trained doctors and nurses are nearby and ready to handle most health crises.

But for the health care system as a whole, the trend could raise costs, particularly if more patients use emergency rooms for non-emergency problems instead going to an urgent care clinic or primary care provider.

While hospitals and insurance companies contest the question of costs, Illinois is poised for a possible miniature boom in miniature ERs. The state now has five stand-alone emergency rooms. In the Chicago suburb of Frankfort, two hospitals are competing to build another after state lawmakers last year extended a sunset date for new licenses.

Fewer than 300 hospitals in the U.S. have free-standing emergency departments, but that is nearly double the number there were in 2005, according to an American Hospital Association survey.

Dr. Alex Rosenau, president-elect of the American College of Emergency Physicians, said he expects demand for emergency care to increase as President Barack Obama's health care law expands the number of people with insurance starting in 2014.

"Urgent care centers will probably expand. And hospitals may see fit to open more free-standing emergency departments," Rosenau said.

Urgent care centers can handle problems that aren't life-threatening, such as sprains, cuts, insect bites and simple broken bones. They usually are open late and on weekends.

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