Need to Visit the Emergency Room? For a Small Fee You Can Make an Appointment
Filed under: Emergency Services, ER Facts, ER Reviews, Other, Wait Times Health Services
A recent article written by the LA Times discussed how eight Southern California hospitals are now part of a system called InQuickEr, in which patients pay a monthly fee of $14.99 up to $24.99 giving them the ability to set up an online appointment for emergency care. This gives the patients the guarantee that they will be seen within 15 minutes of their arrival at the emergency department or they will receive their money back.
One of the hospitals which is now offering this service is Lakewood Regional Medical Center. Life-threatening emergencies will still be given priority. According to the LA Times, critics of the service worry that “letting people pay to secure appointments may just encourage patients who do not need immediate care to use emergency rooms anyway.” Reducing the ER wait-times of people who can afford the monthly fees, will increase the patient-satisfaction of said patients, but what happens to the rest?
With ERtexting this wouldn’t be an issue. It is a texting service that allows you to post your hospitals’ emergency room wait times making it available to anyone in the community. Since 4.5 billion people own a mobile phone world-wide, it makes this a valuable and highly accessible service while boosting patient satisfaction. For more information visit the ERtexting website.
Why Use a Texting Service to Post Wait Times?
As the need to provide ER wait times increases, so do the many different methods you can use to do so. From the internet, to phone applications to texting, the options are various. But the question is, why should you choose a texting service? In this article we will go over some of the many reasons why this would benefit your hospital and increase patient satisfaction.
According to the GSM Association, as of 2009 there were approximately 4.5 billion people who own a mobile phone. This translates to more than half of the world’s population which now stands at 6.8 billion. If we concentrate on the United States, approximately 90% of Americans own a mobile phone. An outstanding 1.5 trillion text messages were sent two years ago, and the numbers keep rising. These mobile phones are with us at all times, which makes it convenient to check ED wait times when the need arises.
Although there are cellular phone applications out there which will also show wait times, not everyone owns a smart phone, but most people are able to receive a text message. ERtexting is an efficient way to move forward, and allow patients to know your hospital’s emergency room wait times any time, any place.
HEALTHCARE MARKETING EXECUTIVES BILLBOARDS ARE ONLY THE BEGINNING IN THE ER WAIT TIMES WARS
If you spend anytime on the road these days, you’ve probably seen hospitals touting their short ER wait times “LIVE” on any of the highways’ many billboards.
HCA hospitals started the strategy in Florida, developed by their advertising agency, AB&A out of Miami. And the outcomes were fantastic. Some showed increases in ER traffic of up to 25%! Of course, HCA’s wait times were stellar, almost always less than 30 minutes, many times less than that.
But then came the new marketing wrinkle that REALLY got the ER’s cranking: Live ER wait times delivered to potential patients via text message in the middle of their emergency. That’s right, just think about it. Your daughter cuts her finger and needs 3 stitches. Don’t you want to know if you need to go to Hospital A and wait 18 minutes or Hospital B and wait 312 minutes? Pretty simple decision.
So what’s this whole text thing about anyway? Well, its about a trillion of them. Over a trillion texts sent in the US in 2009 and climbing. More and more, people are using their smart phones as the device of choice for making decisions on the go.
Many hospitals are turning to the industry leader for live ER text services, ERTexting out of Miami, Florida. Currently the company manages the 4ER411 system of ER text messages. The patient texts 4ER411 with their zip code and instantly they receive a text of the participating hospitals’ live wait times. Hospitals can secure zip codes on an exclusive basis and use the system to really dominate their competitors. And now 4ER411 even features outbound services to maximize their clients’ database. Patients can routinely receive text messages from hospitals on the system for pennies.
So if you’re looking for the wow factor, get that big billboard and let the whole world know! But if getting ahead of the marketing curve is your thing, text away and reap the rewards.
Sarah McCallister
ERtexting in Action: South Florida
Note: This article is about one of the wide-ranging capabilities of the ERtexting service. The billboards described within this article are prominently positioned about the South Florida (Miami, Ft. Lauderdale, and Palm Beach) metro area. Note how ERtexting has paid off for the hospitals featured within this article.
A link to the actual news footage of this story follows.
Aventura, FL- An unexpected industry is taking over roadside billboards.
“Emergency room waiting times just 4 minutes at Aventura Hospital,” reads a billboard that hovers over U.S. 1 in Aventura.
“The number on the billboard is refreshed every 30 minutes, so it is quite accurate,” Gabriel Perez told Local 10′s Jonathan Vigliotti.
Perez created the technology that calculates the wait time and beams it electronically to the road.
“The program calculates from the moment a patient signs in at the hospital to when the doctor visits him in the room,” Perez said.
The high-tech billboard marks the hospital’s three-year effort to streamline emergency room care. Doctors said it is part advertisement, part bragging rights.
“In that time span, we’ve gone from a waiting time of sometimes more than an hour, which is the national average, to a new average of 10 minutes,” said Dr. Roman Skylar.
Skylar, who works in the emergency room at Aventura Hospital, said in the year since the billboard has been up, ER visits have increased by 25 percent.
South Florida doctors said in today’s growing medical market, patients have many hospital options.
“A lot of hospitals are trying to increase patient volume for themselves,” said Mount Sinai Dr. David Lang.
About a year ago, Mt. Sinai erected a billboard about a block away from Aventura Hospital’s ad. Mount Sinai’s sign boasts 24/7 care and board-certified doctors.
“People will choose to go where they have better medical service, better medical care, where they have better doctors on staff. Most people that go to ERs drive themselves. Signs like this stay in the minds of drivers who pass them regularly,” Lang said.
Representatives said that Mount Sinai Hospital, like Aventura Hospital, has seen an increase in patients since the billboard went up a year ago — 40 percent over the previous year, according to Dr. Lang.
Both hospitals agree if it’s a true emergency, forget the billboard and drive to the nearest emergency room. But they said that when it comes to medical care, you’ve got options.
Watch the video of the story above here.



