Emergency
Services
What To Expect
in the Emergency Center
Emergency Services
at Memorial Hermann
With Emergency
Centers located throughout the greater Houston area, the award-winning Memorial Hermann Life Flight air ambulance
program and the services of Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center, a Level 1 Trauma
center, Memorial Hermann offers the most comprehensive network of emergency
services available in southeast Texas. Each year, some 400,000 people
seek treatment in a Memorial Hermann Emergency Center.
If you or a loved
one need emergency care, a Memorial Hermann Emergency Center is close
by ready to meet your needs.
To help make your
visit to a Memorial Hermann Emergency Center as satisfactory as possible,
weve prepared this question-and-answer guide.
How does
the Emergency Center staff determine when I will be seen by a doctor?
All of our Emergency Centers follow a triage system. The first
professional caregiver you will likely meet is a triage nurse. This
individual is usually one of the more experienced Emergency Center nurses,
whose primary role is to obtain a brief focused history and to perform
a rapid physical assessment in order to determine the severity of illness.
Why is triage
necessary?
Triaging (a process that helps us rapidly and safely determine
which patients need to be seen as a priority and which can safely wait
to be seen) is essential because of the nature of emergency rooms.
Several patients
may arrive at the same time with varying severity of physical concerns.
As you would expect, patients whose conditions are considered the most
serious will be seen first. If your condition is not critical, you may
be sent to the admitting area to complete the registration process.
What if my
condition changes while I am waiting?
Tell the triage nurse if symptoms worsen or if new symptoms develop.
The nurse will reassess you and document the new information on your
chart.
What type
of information will the Emergency Center clerk require?
- Your name, age
and date of birth
- Reason for your
visit to the Emergency Center
- Your drivers
license or other identification
- Insurance, Medicare
or Medicaid card
If my condition
is not considered critical, then how long might I wait to be seen?
Your wait will depend on how busy the Emergency Center is and the nature
of your condition. In general, evenings, weekends and holidays are busiest.
During peak periods, wait times may be as long as several hours.
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