When someone is discharged from the emergency room and later deteriorates, families are left asking hard questions:
- Was the evaluation complete?
- Was my loved one actually stable?
- Did the hospital follow federal law?
- What can we do now?
The answer begins with understanding the legal standard under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA).
This post explains what EMTALA requires, how violations occur, and how families can advocate effectively. We will also briefly reference a documented case example to illustrate how regulators analyze these situations.
What Is EMTALA?
EMTALA is a federal law passed in 1986 to ensure that hospitals do not deny emergency medical care based on insurance status or ability to pay. You do not have to be on Medicare or Medicaid for it to apply.
Any hospital with an emergency department that participates in Medicare must:
- Provide an appropriate medical screening examination (MSE)
- Determine whether an emergency medical condition exists
- Stabilize the patient before discharge or transfer
The standard is not perfect care.
The standard is appropriate screening and stabilization within the hospital’s capability.
What Does “Appropriate Medical Screening” Mean?
An appropriate medical screening exam must:
- Be consistent with how the hospital evaluates similar patients
- Use available diagnostic tools (labs, imaging, monitoring) when medically indicated
- Be sufficient to determine whether an emergency condition exists
If a hospital has the capability to perform certain tests and those tests are medically indicated but not used, that may raise EMTALA concerns.
What Does “Stable for Discharge” Mean?
Under EMTALA, stabilization means:
No material deterioration is likely to occur after discharge or transfer.
This is not a comfort standard.
It is a clinical stability standard.
If vital signs remain abnormal, labs are unexplained, or warning signs are present at discharge, stability may be in question.
A Real Example of Regulatory Review
In 2024, federal regulators cited Methodist Southlake Medical Center for failing to provide an appropriate medical screening examination under EMTALA. See document here.
In that case (which we refer to as Nicholas’ case), surveyors documented that:
- An 11-year-old presented with high fever, dizziness, nausea, and vomiting
- Abnormal laboratory findings were present
- No complete blood count (CBC) was ordered
- No documented reassessment of temperature occurred before discharge
- The patient was discharged
- The child later required ICU care for sepsis
- Internal peer review acknowledged failure to recognize warning signs
The key point is not the outcome alone.
Regulators focused on documentation gaps, incomplete evaluation, and failure to meet the screening standard.
The law — not emotion — determines whether a violation occurred.
Common EMTALA Violations
EMTALA violations may include:
- No medical screening exam performed
- Incomplete screening despite warning signs
- Failure to use available diagnostics
- Ignoring abnormal lab results or vital signs
- Discharging a patient who remains unstable
- Improper transfer to another facility
- Financial considerations influencing care
Not every bad outcome qualifies.
If a hospital performs an appropriate screening exam but makes a diagnostic error, that may be malpractice, not EMTALA.
Warning Signs Families Should Not Ignore
Before discharge, pause if:
- Fever remains high
- Heart rate is elevated
- Blood pressure is low
- Labs are abnormal and unexplained
- No reassessment is documented
- Symptoms are worsening
Ask directly:
- “Has an appropriate medical screening exam been completed?”
- “Are all abnormal findings addressed?”
- “Is the patient medically stable for discharge?”
- “Can you document stability?”
Precise language matters.
How to Advocate in Real Time
1. Request Reassessment
If instability is present, ask for:
- Repeat vital signs
- Review of abnormal labs
- Charge nurse involvement
- Attending physician review
2. Document Everything
Write down:
- Provider names
- Times of conversations
- Vital signs at discharge
- Explanations given
Documentation becomes critical if concerns arise later.
How to File an EMTALA Complaint
EMTALA is enforced by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) through your State Survey Agency.
Step 1: Obtain Full Medical Records
Request:
- Emergency department physician notes
- Nursing reassessment notes
- Vital sign logs
- Lab and imaging reports
- Discharge summary
- Transfer documentation (if applicable)
Do not rely on recollection.
Step 2: Compare Records to EMTALA Requirements
Ask:
- Was the screening exam consistent with hospital capability?
- Were appropriate diagnostics used?
- Were abnormal findings addressed?
- Was stabilization clearly documented before discharge?
Focus on documentation and objective findings.
Step 3: Submit a Complaint
Search online: “EMTALA complaint State Survey Agency [Your State]”
Or call 1-800-MEDICARE for guidance.
Your complaint should include:
- Date and time of visit
- Symptoms at arrival
- Abnormal findings
- Tests not performed
- Condition at discharge
- Post-discharge outcome
Keep it factual and structured.
What Happens After Filing?
Investigators may:
- Audit medical records
- Interview staff
- Conduct on-site inspections
- Compare care to hospital EMTALA policy
- Issue citations if violations are confirmed
Penalties may include:
- Civil monetary fines
- Corrective action plans
- Policy changes
- Increased oversight
The process is regulatory, not compensatory.
EMTALA vs. Medical Malpractice
|
EMTALA |
Medical Malpractice |
|
Federal access law |
Civil negligence claim |
|
Focus: screening & stabilization |
Focus: quality of care |
|
Enforced by CMS |
Handled in court |
|
May result in fines |
May result in damages |
Both pathways can exist simultaneously, but they are legally distinct.
Final Takeaway
If your loved one deteriorated after leaving the ER, ask one disciplined question:
Did the hospital meet the federal requirement for appropriate medical screening and stabilization?
EMTALA exists to ensure no patient is discharged unstable because warning signs were overlooked or evaluation was incomplete.
Understanding the law allows families to advocate with precision — not just frustration.
If you believe the legal standard was not met, obtain the records, review them objectively, and take appropriate action.
