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I know of a hospital {not the one I work in} that refers people to the city fire department. This department gets used equiptment such as crutches, walkers, wheel chairs, ect by donations made from the public and rents this equiptment to the public for about 5 dollars for an allotted amount of time. It's great PR for the fire dept and it really cuts costs for the patients. It's a very successful program all around. Maybe someone could set something like this up where you live.
Cal, I understand the fiscal reasoning behind the crutches, but they certainly can't send someone out the door with a simple/nondisplaced fx without crutches..that's malpactice. How do they they justify fx sans crutches? The fire department deal sounds great. I always tell people not to throw the crutches out, either return them or donate them to Goodwill.
Guess what? Our attorney(s) said it was in our best interest, from an Risk Management perspective, to continue to give crutches out and apply for a DME license...yeah! Just in time for the 11th hour.
The ED satff at my place is wonderful, though, willing to make it work!
Thanks for your input.
We ran across the same thing Casluis. Our docs write a script for the crutches and the patient (and/or family) is responsible for getting it filled. We direct them to the DME places, some of which are "on call" 24 hours a day. I agree that there is a legal aspect to not giving them out, but we take them out by w/c which helps. I also think that patient need to take responsibility for themselves and their health care needs. If that means an inconveinent trip to another town for crutches, then so be it. Hospitals cannot continue to provide every service known to mankind for free. Everyone, hospitals included, have the right to make money. If we don't, we can't be there to help the people when they need us most.
We hand out cruthches to any pt that needs them, as long as our Docs write the order. We also do crutch training and require return demo from the pt prior to d.c.
The feeling is that people ned to show a rock botton, bare necessity, level of skill and knowledge in using the crutches or we are at liability risk for mishaps caused by the improper use of the crutches. I do not know who picks up the tab on our crutches, but we hand out a lot of them.
casluis
4 Posts
We have been asked to stop giving out crutches to ED patients (because we cannot collect on the charges). We see 38,000 patients a year...many indigent. We do not have a DME license and the hospital is not interested in getting one.
What are other hospitals doing about this?
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