Emergency departments nationwide are facing a critical challenge: patients who require hospital beds cannot access them quickly enough. As boarding times increase and admission delays strain capacity, the lack of effective emergency and hospital medicine integration creates operational friction between emergency medicine (EM) and hospital medicine (HM). This misalignment impacts clinicians and patients alike while placing added pressure on hospital performance and financial sustainability
Yet when EM and HM integrate strategically, something remarkable happens. The same hospitals that struggled with boarding and throughput can create significant operational capacity without adding a single bed. The key lies in optimizing the strategic balance between acuity management, matching clinical resources to patient complexity, and capacity management, maximizing patient flow and throughput.
When integration becomes strategy
Consider one hospital’s experience. This 204-bed facility was caught in a familiar trap: high length of stay, climbing readmission rates, and persistent disconnects between departments. Emergency medicine clinicians felt Hospitalists were not responding promptly enough to requests for admissions. Hospital medicine physicians felt emergency medicine clinicians werenot completing adequate workups for admitted patients. Patients experienced the dysfunction through long waits and fragmented care.
The turning point came when leadership decided to stop treating EM and HM as separate domains and start building them as an integrated system. Working with SCP Health, they took two strategic steps.
First, they stabilized their workforce by incorporating nurse practitioners and physician assistants more strategically while recruiting permanent physicians and establishing strong medical director leadership. This created breathing room to focus on systematic improvements rather than constantly scrambling to cover shifts.
Second, they formed a Joint Operations Committee (JOC) that brought EM and HM clinicians together regularly. Not for casual lunches or abstract discussions, but for structured collaboration focused on concrete operational improvements: standardized handoff protocols, shared performance metrics, collaborative problem-solving for complex patients, and communication channels that prevented small issues from becoming big problems.
The impact: Numbers that tell the story
Within a year, the results were undeniable:
Length of stay improvements created immediate capacity. Hospital medicine LOS dropped 13% (from 4.58 to 4.00 days), while ED throughput improved 17% (from 3:52 to 2:51). These aren’t marginal gains—they represent the equivalent of adding significant bed capacity without construction costs.
The impact on operational and financial sustainability was significant. The combined LOS reductions improved operational efficiency and strengthened financial sustainability.
Quality indicators improved alongside efficiency. Patient satisfaction increased 9%. Pneumonia readmissions fell 4.2%, and CHF readmissions dropped 15.12%. Shorter stays didn’t mean rushing patients out—they meant better coordination and more appropriate care throughout the journey.
These results came from better teamwork, clearer protocols, and strategic deployment of the care team. Not from working harder, but from working better together.
Why this works: The dual-pillar connection
What makes EM-HM integration so effective is how it strengthens both foundational pillars of hospital operations simultaneously.
Better acuity management happens when workforce is deployed strategically and care pathways are clear. Incorporating NPs and PAs effectively while establishing standardized protocols means resources match patient complexity more precisely. The significant drops in readmissions (15% for CHF, 4% for pneumonia) show that patients received appropriate care intensity throughout their stay—not just rushed through the system.
Better capacity management follows from enhanced coordination. The 13% improvement in hospital medicine LOS and 17% boost in ED throughput didn’t require adding beds—they came from eliminating inefficiencies. Better handoffs, shared metrics, and collaborative problem-solving removed the bottlenecks that had been constraining flow and improved financial stability.
Here’s the virtuous cycle: when you match care intensity to patient needs more accurately, patients move through the system more appropriately. When you create better flow and throughput, you have the operational space to deliver more individualized care. Each pillar reinforces the other.
EM-HM integration becomes the catalyst because these departments sit at the critical decision point: determining who needs what level of care and ensuring they receive it efficiently from the moment they arrive.
The broader lesson: Integration as strategic advantage
EM-HM integration is particularly powerful because it addresses the first and most critical decision point in every hospital admission: determining who needs what level of care and ensuring they receive it efficiently.
But integration extends beyond just EM and HM. The principles demonstrated here—shared accountability, standardized protocols, clear communication, and joint problem-solving—apply throughout the patient journey. From observation medicine to discharge planning to workforce optimization, the same approach creates similar gains and can unlock significant operational improvements without massive capital investments.
Taking the next step
The capacity crisis won’t resolve itself, but strategic integration offers a proven path forward. For health systems ready to act:
Understand the framework: Read “The strategic balance of acuity and capacity management” to explore how these two pillars work together to create sustainable hospital operations.
See the strategic levers: Download our strategic implementation guide to understand the seven interconnected actions that drive operational transformation, including how EM-HM integration fits within a broader strategic approach.
Get the comprehensive analysis: Access the full whitepaper “The Critical Balance: How Hospital Medicine Aligns Patient Acuity and System Capacity to Protect Access to Care” for evidence-based strategies, detailed frameworks, and actionable steps.
Connect with SCP Health: Our hospital medicine solutions help health systems implement integrated care models that balance acuity and capacity to protect access to care. Contact us to discuss your specific operational challenges.



