Journal of emergency nursing : JEN : official publication of the Emergency Department Nurses Association
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Multicenter Study
Women's Experiences of Miscarriage in the Emergency Department.
Miscarriage is a common event, usually managed in the emergency department. Although studies have examined the impact of miscarriage on women's mental health and the effects of their dissatisfaction with health care received, little is known about the characteristics of the miscarriage experience in the emergency department. The objective of this study was to identify characteristics of care management that may have contributed to the difficulties experienced by women presenting with miscarriage in the emergency department. ⋯ Lack of information throughout the care management of miscarriage exacerbated the already-difficult nature of this event for the participants. Training emergency nurses to give adequate and complete information enables the delivery of compassionate care, potentially making a difficult situation less traumatic.
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Review Case Reports
Immunotherapy Adverse Events: An Emergency Nursing Perspective.
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Multicenter Study
Human Trafficking Victim Identification, Assessment, And Intervention Strategies In South Texas Emergency Departments.
Human-trafficking victims seek assistance for health issues in emergency departments. This point of contact provides an opportunity for screening and identification of the victim's situation, enabling intervention. ⋯ The failure to recognize human-trafficking victims prevents assessment of the victim's status and further delays referral to appropriate resources. Barriers to screening for human trafficking included lack of awareness of the human-trafficking experience, need for clinical education related to evidence-based protocols, and need for validated screening instruments and standardization of processes that promote action and provide victim assistance.
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The purpose of this study was to explore and describe (1) the extent to which emergency departments in the United States are promoting the quality of triage and the reliability of triage systems according to recommendations in the Emergency Severity Index (ESI) Handbook and (2) if relationships existed between triage structure (policies) and process (procedures) in emergency departments that promote accuracy of triage decisions. ⋯ Donabedian's model emphasizes that good structure and process are antecedents of good outcomes. This study serves as a foundation on which to examine the consistency of emergency departments meeting the ESI guidelines that promote triage accuracy and maintaining the reliability of evidence-based triage acuity systems.
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Individual and collective mindfulness attracts growing research attention, yet reports of their impact on health care professionals' work behaviors are scarce, especially in the emergency department. The aim of the current study was to explore whether the association between trait mindfulness and triage accuracy is moderated by the emergency workload environment, and whether this association promotes patient satisfaction subject to levels of collective mindfulness. ⋯ Trait and collective mindfulness are relevant to ED triage and patient satisfaction, but their effects are bounded by workload. The beneficial gain of nurses' trait mindfulness on triage accuracy and collective mindfulness on patient satisfaction is demonstrated only under high-workload environments but limited under extreme-workload environments.