Emergency medicine Australasia : EMA
-
Emerg Med Australas · Jun 2017
Paediatric lumbar punctures: How do paediatric and emergency doctors differ?
The objective of the study was to identify any differences between emergency physicians and emergency trainees and paediatricians and paediatric trainees in performing paediatric lumbar punctures (LPs). ⋯ Paediatricians and paediatric trainees are more likely to be confident in performing LP in very young children than are emergency physicians and emergency trainees. They are more likely to perform fundoscopy prior to the procedure, but are much less likely to encourage parental presence during the LP.
-
Emerg Med Australas · Jun 2017
Observational StudyPatient satisfaction with procedural sedation in the emergency department.
The aim of this study was to determine patient satisfaction with procedural sedation as a function of nature of the procedure and depth of sedation. ⋯ Generally, the level of patient satisfaction is high. Greater satisfaction is associated with deeper sedation, sedation with propofol and non-orthopaedic procedures.
-
Emerg Med Australas · Jun 2017
Improving emergency department medical clinical handover: Barriers at the bedside.
The present paper describes our experience of developing and piloting a best practice model of medical clinical handover. Secondary aims were to improve reliability of communication, identify negative effects on patient care and assess staff adherence and acceptance of the process. ⋯ Bedside handover using ISBAR resulted in improved patient involvement, communication and a non-significant trend to improved patient safety. Despite a majority of doctors acknowledging these findings, preference remained for a centralised handover using ISBAR. Gaining staff acceptance of a process change is essential to its success. A barrier to acceptance could be that staff are time-poor. We suggest handover processes can be strengthened by adequate staffing and small, incremental improvements to existing models combined with auditing of outcomes.
-
Emerg Med Australas · Jun 2017
Adherence to national exercise guidelines by patients attending emergency departments: A multi-site survey.
The proportion of adults in Australia meeting or exceeding the national guidelines for physical activity has remained relatively static over the past 10 years. The research objective was to measure self-reported physical activity and sedentary behaviour among ED patients in accordance with Australia's current physical activity and sedentary behaviour guidelines, revised in 2014. ⋯ Overall adherence with physical activity guidelines is low among adults attending the ED. All adults need to be encouraged to undertake muscle strengthening activities, especially adults in older age groups.
-
Emerg Med Australas · Jun 2017
Observational StudyKetamine reduces the need for intubation in patients with acute severe mental illness and agitation requiring transport to definitive care: An observational study.
The aim of this study was to review mental health patients transported by a dedicated statewide critical care retrieval team before and after the implementation of a ketamine sedation guideline. ⋯ The implementation of a ketamine clinical practice guideline for agitated mental health patients was associated with an increase in the number of patients receiving ketamine as part of their sedation regime and a reduction in the number of patients requiring intubation for transport. Appropriately trained critical care retrieval teams should consider ketamine as part of the sedation regime for agitated mental health patients.