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Retired Maryland Emergency Physician Is Still in the Fight

By Darrin Scheid, CAE | on December 6, 2024 | 0 Comment
Annals of Emergency Medicine Features Pain & Palliative Care Policy Rx
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By some definitions, you could call former Maryland state legislator Dan Morhaim, MD, FACEP, a retired emergency physician. He thinks of it as “re-deployed.” Dr. Morhaim spent more than two decades in the Maryland House of Delegates, fighting for legislation to protect health care workers and patients before his final legislative term ended in 2019. His health care focus included hospital efficiency, physician and patient satisfaction, and emergency department (ED) wait times, as well as a host of nonhealth issues.

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ACEP Now: Vol 43 – No 12 – December 2024

Today, Dr. Morhaim is donating his time to a recently established Maryland commission focused on ED wait times.

The ED Wait Time Reduction Commission took effect in July and will spend three years developing relevant strategies and initiatives to recommend to state and local agencies, hospitals, and health care professionals. Recommendations should address factors throughout the health care system that contribute to increased ED wait times.

Dr. Morhaim is also serving a four-year term on the Maryland Behavioral Health Advisory Council, a group that works to enhance behavioral health services statewide.

“Maryland, like most states, has an ER wait time problem,” Dr. Morhaim said. “We’ve had kids and adolescents, often with mental health issues, spending days or even weeks in an ER waiting for placement. There was a work group a couple of years ago that didn’t accomplish much, so the legislature enacted legislation creating this commission. There are two ER doctors, and 11 other people are involved. We have a fair amount of power to demand data that could lead to real solutions—instead of working with Band-Aid fixes.”

Passion for Policy

Dr. Morhaim said he never would have predicted such a lengthy career in public policy after serving clinically from 1981 to 1994 as chair of the Department of Emergency Medicine at Franklin Square Hospital in Baltimore. But then, he never really saw himself becoming an ED doctor either. That changed when, as a college student, he joined a friend on a volunteer shift at Highland Hospital in Oakland, Calif. That shift led to medical school, and that led to board certification in emergency medicine and internal medicine.

His passion for policy stems from his clinical work and seeing numerous social issues in the patients he treated. Much of what Dr. Morhaim encountered in the ED, from end-of-life crises to preventable health conditions, was exacerbated by social factors like poverty, addiction, and lack of preventative care.

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Topics: AdvocacycareerDr. Dan MorhaimProfiles

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