When they arrived at the hospital, he was seen almost immediately.
“That was my last resort and it worked,” she said. “He would have probably been at home in pain if not for the service.”
In an era of increased competition driven by the nation's health law, hospitals in California and around the country are hoping online ER appointments will help attract patients anxious to avoid long waits in a crowded and often chaotic environment.
“It makes for a happier camper,” said Susan Dubuque, a national expert in hospital marketing. “When it comes to health care, consumers want more control over everything.”
The system, adopted by Northridge and other hospitals in the Dignity Health chain about a year ago, is intended only for patients who don't have life-threatening or debilitating emergencies. To check in online, patients must explain the reason for their visit and check a box that they can wait for treatment.
Patients having chest pain or trouble breathing, for instance, are instructed to call 911 or go directly to an ER. Those with an ankle sprain or a fever, for instance, might be able to make an appointment.
When patients get to the hospital, they still may be bumped by more seriously ill patients.
The approach makes business sense for hospitals because it lets medical staff know who may be coming through the door and it makes patients more comfortable, hospital executives say.
Patients want to access health care the same way they do services in other industries, such as retail or travel, said Chris Song, a spokesman for InQuicker, a Nashville-based company that offers the online scheduling in California and 25 other states.
“When is the last time someone bought plane tickets at the gate?” he said.
Some critics say the online check-in system may be convenient but is not necessarily cost-effective. If the country wants to decrease health care costs, patients need to be treated at the right place at the right time, said Dr. Del Morris, president of the California Academy of Family Physicians. Patients who can make appointments should do so at their doctors' offices, he said.
“Emergency rooms are there to take care of people who have emergencies,” said Morris, medical director of the Stanislaus County Health Services Agency.
The Dignity chain says roughly 12,000 patients have scheduled visits for emergency rooms at hospitals in California, Arizona and Nevada. Recently, Dignity stepped up marketing, with billboards, print advertisements and online and radio spots. One features a woman sitting in a hospital waiting room chair – and then cuts to her on a living room couch with a dog, as the words on the screen read, “Wait for the ER from home.”
On the day of his appointment at Northridge Hospital Medical Center, Granillo winced and shifted uncomfortably in the ER exam room.
“How are you feeling?” asked his doctor, Stephen Jones. “Do you need more pain medicine?”
Granillo nodded and told him that his back and stomach both hurt.
After a CT-scan, doctors told the couple that Granillo, as it turned out, had a very serious condition– lymphoma, a type of cancer.
Jones, the medical director for the emergency room, said some patients who come in through the appointment service probably should be seen by a primary care doctor but either don't have one or can't get a timely appointment. Others, like Granillo, shouldn't wait for care, he said.
Dignity Health, which is also offering the online reservations at urgent care centers and doctors' offices, hopes that the new service will minimize wait times and boost patient satisfaction scores, said Page West, chief nursing officer. Under the Affordable Care Act, Medicare reimbursements for hospitals are tied to results on the patient surveys.
Others say hospitals need to do more to fix the emergency room process in which people show up and wait for hours, said Bridget Duffy, chief medical officer at Vocera Communications in San Jose and an expert in the patient experience. Besides offering online appointments, Duffy said hospitals need to assess patients more quickly, improve communication with them and better manage their pain.
As it stands, she said, “It's ridiculous … it's like herding cattle.”
This KHN story also ran on Southern California Public Radio. Click here to listen to the story.
Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit, nonpartisan health policy research and communication organization not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.