April 14, 2014 / Modified apr 14, 2014 1:53 p.m.

Copper Queen Hospital in Bisbee Expands Emergency Care

Larger ER will accommodate increase in people going to doctor now that they have federally-mandated health insurance.

Copper Queen Hospital 2014 spotlight Copper Queen Community Hospital in Bisbee, Ariz.
John Charley, Copper Queen Community Hospital

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The hospital in Bisbee opened an expanded emergency room Friday to serve more patients in southern Arizona, including Sierra Vista and Douglas.

Jim Dickson portrait Jim Dickson, CEO of Copper Queen Community Hospital in Bisbee, Ariz.
AZPM Staff

Several Southern Arizona hospitals have struggled during the recession. Economic downturn, plus cuts to the amount of money doctors receive when they treat patients on Medicare, and the increased cost of treating uninsured patients in past years, have caused some hospital closures. The Douglas hospital is attempting to emerge from a bankruptcy filling, said Jim Dickson, CEO of the Copper Queen Hospital in Bisbee.

A few years ago, the hospital started a new ER model where some patients who can be fast tracked through the care system are seen and released quickly. That increased the number of patients, which necessitated an emergency room expansion, Dickson said.

“It turned out to be such a good service, 7 minutes to a doctor, out in less than 2 hours, that our demand has tripled so we needed to build a new space to be able to provide the service to the growing demand that we’ve seen," he said.

A $4 million loan from the U.S. Department of Agriculture paid for the expansion, and the hospital has 40 years to pay that money back. New equipment was paid for with a grant from the federal government, he said.

The Copper Queen is not the only emergency room south of Tucson, but it treats people from other Southern Arizona communities, such as Sierra Vista and Douglas.

More people are seeing doctors now, Dickson said, because of the requirement in the Affordable Care Act that all residents have health insurance or pay a fine against this year's taxes.

"They’re utilizing the ER as their place for health care because they do not have a primary care doctor," he said.

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