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- Brian C Drolet, Scott D Lifchez, Sidney M Jacoby, Andrew Varone, Linda A Regan, Jill M Baren, Edward Akelman, A Lee Osterman, and L Scott Levin.
- Department of Plastic Surgery, Rhode Island Hospital and the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI; Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD. Electronic address: brian.c.drolet@gmail.com.
- J Hand Surg Am. 2015 Dec 1; 40 (12): 2435-9.
PurposeTo survey emergency medicine (EM) residency and hand surgery fellowship program directors (PDs) to identify consensus in their perceptions of appropriate emergency care of upper extremity emergencies.MethodsWe created a framework to group common upper extremity emergency diagnoses and surveyed PDs to evaluate the training background--EM, general orthopedic or plastic surgery, or hand fellowship--most appropriate to provide acute, point-of-care management for each of these diagnostic groupings. Responses were pooled and consensus was established with greater than 75% agreement between groups.ResultsWe received 79 responses from hand fellowship PDs (90% response rate) and 151 responses from EM PDs (49% response rate). We identified consensus for the training background that PDs in both specialties felt was appropriate to care for 17 of 21 diagnostic groupings in the framework.ConclusionsThere was a high level of consensus between EM and hand surgery PDs regarding diagnoses that acutely require training in hand surgery versus those that can be managed by an EM physician. Our diagnostic framework may help reduce unnecessary hand surgery consultation and may help to identify patients who do not require more specialized acute care and thus decrease unnecessary transfers.Type Of Study/Level Of EvidenceEconomic and Decision Analyses IV.Copyright © 2015 American Society for Surgery of the Hand. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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