ER Inspector MERCY HOSPITAL OF BUFFALOMERCY HOSPITAL OF BUFFALO

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Updated September 19, 2019

This database was last updated in September 2019. It should only be used as a historical snapshot.Researchers can find more recent data on timely and effective care in the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ hospitals datasets and guidance about hospital regulations.

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ER Inspector » New York » MERCY HOSPITAL OF BUFFALO

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MERCY HOSPITAL OF BUFFALO

565 abbott road, buffalo, N.Y. 14220

(716) 826-7000

62% of Patients Would "Definitely Recommend" this Hospital
(N.Y. Avg: 66%)

2 violations related to ER care since 2015

Hospital Type

Acute Care Hospitals

Hospital Owner

Voluntary non-profit - Private

ER Volume

Very high (60K+ patients a year)

See this hospital's CMS profile page or inspection reports.

Patient Pathways Through This ER

After a patient arrives at the emergency room, they are typically seen by a doctor or medical practitioner and then either sent home or admitted to the hospital and taken to a room. A small percentage of patients leave without being seen. The chart below shows on average how long each of these pathways take. Lower numbers are better, and all times refer to the average length of time people waited.

Arrives at ER
3% of patients leave without being seen
6hrs 37min Admitted to hospital
9hrs 1min Taken to room
2hrs 48min Sent home

All wait times are average.

Detailed Quality Measures

Here is a more in depth look at each quality measure, compared to state and national averages for hospitals with very high ER volumes. Experts caution that very small differences between hospitals for a given measure are unlikely to correspond to noticeable differences in the real world.

Measure
Average for this Hospital
How this Hospital Compares

(to other hospitals with similar
ER volumes, when available)

Discharged Patients
Time Until Sent Home

Average time patients spent in the emergency room before being sent home (if not admitted).

2hrs 48min
National Avg.
2hrs 50min
N.Y. Avg.
3hrs 26min
This Hospital
2hrs 48min
Impatient Patients
Left Without
Being Seen

Percentage of patients who left the emergency room without being seen by a doctor or medical practitioner.

3%
Avg. U.S. Hospital
2%
Avg. N.Y. Hospital
2%
This Hospital
3%
Admitted Patients
Time Before Admission

Average time patients spent in the emergency room before being admitted to the hospital.

6hrs 37min

Data submitted were based on a sample of cases/patients.

National Avg.
5hrs 33min
N.Y. Avg.
7hrs 50min
This Hospital
6hrs 37min
Admitted Patients
Transfer Time

Among patients admitted, additional time they spent waiting before being taken to their room (sometimes referred to as "boarding time.")

2hrs 24min

Data submitted were based on a sample of cases/patients.

National Avg.
2hrs 24min
N.Y. Avg.
3hrs 12min
This Hospital
2hrs 24min
Special Patients
CT Scan

Percentage of patients who arrived with stroke symptoms and did not receive brain scan results within 45 mins.

No Data Available

The number of cases/patients is too few to report. Results are based on a shorter time period than required.

National Avg.
27%
N.Y. Avg.
26%
This Hospital
No Data Available

Violations Related to ER Care

Problems found in emergency rooms at this hospital since 2015, as identified during the investigation of a complaint. About This Data →

Violation
Full Text
COMPLIANCE WITH 489.24

May 3, 2018

Based upon document review and interview the facility did not comply with all the provisions for maintaining a central log.

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Based upon document review and interview the facility did not comply with all the provisions for maintaining a central log. Please reference findings under Tag A 205.

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EMERGENCY ROOM LOG

May 3, 2018

Based on observation, policy review, document review, medical record review and interview, The facility failed to ensure all individuals are entered into the central log upon presentation to the Emergency Department (ED) for 1 of 24 patients.

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Based on observation, policy review, document review, medical record review and interview, The facility failed to ensure all individuals are entered into the central log upon presentation to the Emergency Department (ED) for 1 of 24 patients. (Patient #1). The current system fails to log in patients upon arrival which could result in a delay in triage, medical screening exam and/or treatment for a medical emergency. Findings include: Observation on 05/02/18 at 10:15 AM revealed that when entering the ED waiting room, there is a desk to the left were registration staff are located. There is a desk to the right, where a security guard is stationed. On the security desk, there is a bin holding the Patient Information" slips, which have instructions for patients to complete the information (arrival time, name, date of birth, primary physician and reason for visit) and hand the slip to the security guard or triage nurse. Behind the registration desk, behind a curtain is the triage area. Review of policy "Patient Transfers: EMTALA/COBRA" effective 09/18/17 indicates it is the responsibility of the hospital to maintain a central log which records each patient who presents for treatment or is transferred to another facility. The log must include: Name, age, gender, date/time/means of arrival or transfer, nature of medical condition/complaint, patient refusal of treatment, hospital inability to treat, disposition and time of departure. Review of an email/surveillance pictures sent by Staff (B) Director of ED Services revealed a man (allegedly Patient #1) and a woman entered the Mercy Ambulatory Center (MACC) for approximately 9 minutes (11:34 PM to 11:43 PM) on 03/24/18. Review of the MACC ED Daily Log (central log) dated 03/24/18 and 03/25/18 revealed no evidence Patient #1 presented to the MACC. Review of the Mercy Hospital ED record (2nd facility Patient #1 presented to) dated 03/25/18 revealed Patient #1 arrived as a walk-in at the facility a 12:00 midnight with a complaint of chest pain. He was triaged as an Acuity 2- Emergent, received a cardiac workup and was admitted for observation at 02:04 AM. Interview on 05/02/18 at 10:20 AM with Staff (C), Security revealed when a patient enters the waiting room, they come to the security desk, fill out a slip, give it to the security guard, who looks to see what the problem is and then gives it to the triage nurse. They do not enter patient information into the system. Interview on 05/02/18 from 10:30 to 10:40 AM with Staff (A), Nurse Manager revealed all patients present to the security or registration desk and fill out a Patient Sign In slip. Security or registration staff either give the Patient Sign In slip to the triage nurse assigned to the triage area located behind the registration desk in the waiting room (until 12 midnight) or bring the slip in the back (ED proper) to notify nursing staff that a patient has presented in the waiting room. Patients are entered into the computer system by the triage nurse. Interview on 05/02/18 at 10:35 AM with Staff (D), Triage Nurse revealed security will tell her if there is a patient who needs to be seen right away, otherwise the slips are placed in a bin located on the security guard desk. When they are busy, Staff (D) looks at the slips to determine who is to be seen first. Interview on 05/02/18 at 02:15 PM with Staff (J), Triage Nurse revealed that if a patient leaves before triage, they are not entered into the central log. On 03/24/18 Staff (L), Registration Clerk came into the back (ED proper) indicating there was a chest pain patient (Patient #1) in the waiting room. Staff (J) walked out to the waiting room, approached the couple (Patient #1 and a woman) and said "I'm the triage nurse. I have one thing to do and will be right back." The woman asked for Staff (J)'s name and then the couple left. Patient #1 signed a Patient Information slip, but there is no time (or date) on it. Patient #1 was not triaged so he was not entered into the central log. Interview on 05/02/18 at 03:15 PM with Staff (L), Registration Clerk, revealed patients are not entered into the computer prior to triage. Security does not enter information into the computer. On 03/24/18 a couple came in. Staff (L) went to the back (ED proper) to get the triage nurse. The triage nurse came out to the waiting area, told the couple she was dealing with a critical patient in the back and would be back out when she was done. The triage nurse left and came back a couple minutes later, but the couple were already gone. Interview on 05/03/18 at 10:10 AM with Staff (A), Nurse Manager and Staff (N), Quality Assurance confirmed that Patient #1 was not entered into the ED central log and no medical record was generated because he left before triage. Patient Information slips used when a patient presents to the ED are not routinely kept on file and are not part of the permanent record or ED central log. The slips do not have the visit date or the name of the person accepting the slips. The arrival time entered in the electronic medical record (EMR) is the time the nurse starts to enter the patient information during triage, and not necessarily when the patient arrived at the facility.

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Notes

“Average time” refers to the median wait time (the midpoint of all patients' wait times). References to “doctor or medical practitioner” indicate a doctor, nurse practitioner or physician's assistant. CMS reports the CT scan quality measure as the percentage of patients who received a scan within 45 minutes. We have reversed that measure so that all measures follow a “lower is better” pattern.

Additional design and development by Mike Tigas and Sisi Wei.

Sources

All data comes from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Detailed quality measures at the hospital, state and national level were last updated September 2019. Most data was collected between October 2017 and October 2018. Data on ER-related violations is from January 2015 to June 2019.

Additional Info

How We've Updated ER Inspector | Download ProPublica's Emergency Room Planning Toolkit | About This Data

Don’t See Your ER?

In some cases we aren’t able to identify the exact location of a hospital, so it doesn’t appear on our mapped search results. However, it may still be in our database – try looking for it in the list of hospitals on each state's page.

In other cases, the hospital is missing from our database because it doesn't have an emergency department.

In other cases, the hospital is missing from the federal government’s Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) data. There are a couple of reasons why a hospital isn’t included in CMS data: it may not participate in Medicare, or it may share a certification number with another hospital (common across large hospital systems).

If you notice a hospital missing from our database, please first check if you can find it on CMS' website, and that it is listed as having an ER. If so, please email us with the hospital name and address.