Emergency Room FAQs
Get answers to commonly asked questions about our emergency room, such as what conditions need a visit, how to follow safety protocols and how to get help with your medical bills.
Emergency Conditions
When should I bring a loved one or myself to the ER?
Call 911 or immediately go to an emergency room when someone is experiencing the following:
- Shortness of breath, difficulty breathing, wheezingShortness of breath, difficulty breathing, wheezing
- Chest pain
- Fainting or dizziness
- Sudden numbness or weakness
- Sudden inability to see, speak, walk or move
- Confusion or changes in mental state
- Fever with convulsions, or fever in a child 3 months old or younger
- Bleeding that cannot be stopped
- Coughing or vomiting blood
- Blood in the urine or bloody diarrhea
- Severe headache or head injury
- Intense abdominal pain
If you or a loved one are not certain if a visit to the emergency room is necessary, please go to your nearest ER for an evaluation.
Chest pain can be a sign of a heart attack. Call 911 or have someone take you to the closest emergency room if your chest pain lasts longer than 5 minutes or does not go away when you rest or take medication.
Other symptoms of a heart attack to look for are:
- Sweating
- Shortness of breath
- Rapid or irregular heartbeat
- Nausea or vomiting
- Pain in back, upper abdomen, arm or shoulder
- Lightheadedness
F – Face: Ask the person to smile. Does one side of the face droop?
A – Arms: Ask the person to raise both arms. Does one arm drift downward?
S – Speech: Ask the person to repeat a simple phrase. Is the speech slurred or strange?
T – Time: If you see any of these sings, call 911 immediately.
Note the time that the symptoms first appear. Do not drive yourself to the hospital; call an ambulance so medical personnel can begin life-saving treatment on the way to the emergency room.
Minutes matter. Stroke treatments work best only if the stroke is recognized and diagnosed within the first 3 hours of the first symptoms.
ER Experience
Your care team will evaluate your symptoms to determine whether you need a COVID test. Please let your care team know if you are experiencing COVID symptoms such as fever or chills, cough, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, fatigue, diarrhea, new loss of taste or smell, sore throat, headache, and/or nausea or vomiting.
If you are admitted to the hospital, we may test you for COVID so we can safely care for you. You may be tested even if you are not experiencing symptoms.
The emergency room is the best place to be when timely medical care is required. It is important to treat serious medical conditions promptly before they worsen and become life-threatening. For many medical emergencies like heart attack and stroke, quick treatment can be the difference between life and death.
The risk of contracting COVID-19 in the ER is extremely low. Our team is taking precautions to keep the ER as safe as possible including limiting visitors, mask wearing, increased cleaning and disinfecting and the wearing of personal protective equipment (PPE).
Sometimes patients need more time in the ER than predicted. We want to give our patients all the help and information they came for. While you are waiting, please let a staff member know if there is anything they can help you with
If, while waiting, you begin to feel so unwell that you start getting chills or become nauseated, please let a staff member know.
The following items and information will be extremely helpful to your ER care team:
- List of current medications
- List of allergies
- Insurance cards and co-pay
- Photo ID
- Pain in back, upper abdomen, arm or shoulder
- Emergency contact information
If you ingested a poison or toxin, try to bring it with you, a photo of the entire label, or be able to tell your care team what toxin you ingested. If you are going to the ER for an animal bite, be able to give as much information about where the animal that bit you came from.
Please leave valuables at home.
If you are in the ER with your child, feel free to bring their favorite small toy, stuffed animal or a handheld electronic game to help keep them occupied.
Not feeling well, being in a strange place with different flooring, medications and bedside medical equipment can increase your risk of falling. Some medication can make you unsteady, dizzy or sleepy. We encourage all patients to ask for help before getting up.
Please do not give your child anything to eat or drink if there is a chance they may need sedation or anesthesia for surgery.
Once the decision has been made to admit you to the hospital, you will be taken to a patient room. If a room is not yet available, your care team will work to keep you as comfortable as possible until one is ready.
Your care team may run more tests, if needed. They will also assist you in contacting any loved ones, if needed. Please let your care team know if you have any questions about your care.
It is important to follow your discharge orders and arrange an appointment with your primary care doctor or specialist, if needed. Please ask a member of your care team if you need a primary care doctor or specialist. If you do not improve as expected or your symptoms return, return to the hospital.