Military medicine
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The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of nursing telephone triage on the appropriateness of emergency department (ED) use among 563 patients at a military hospital by comparing 286 ED patients referred by the Tel-a-Nurse Line (TAN) with 277 non-TAN-referred patients from October 2000 to November 2000. When controlling for confounding factors, TAN-referred patients had less appropriate ED use than non-TAN-referred patients, although this was not statistically significant (odds ratio = 0.87, p = 0.452). ⋯ TAN patients directed to the ED because of clinic appointment unavailability contributed significantly to inappropriate ED use with 62% having low acuity. This finding underscores the need to evaluate clinic availability for the TAN line and possibly for all patients as well.
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The U. S. Department of Defense (DoD) conducts humanitarian assistance missions under the Overseas Humanitarian Disaster and Civic Aid program for the statutory purposes of training military personnel, serving the political interests of the host nation and United States, and providing humanitarian relief to foreign civilians. ⋯ Recommendations for improving the effectiveness of DoD HA under Overseas Humanitarian Disaster and Civic Aid programs include: ensuring adequate staffing to meet the complex, dynamic nature of humanitarian missions and measuring the effectiveness of each project in mandatory, standardized AARs. For medical HA projects, application of public health strategies would compliment the patient care approach of the majority of medical projects to date. This offers possibilities for enhancing host nation infrastructure, allowing improvements beyond the short period of most military humanitarian projects.