Annals of emergency medicine
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Editorial Comment
Time to Treat Alcohol Use Disorder in the Emergency Department.
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Multicenter Study
Extended-Release Naltrexone and Case Management for Treatment of Alcohol Use Disorder in the Emergency Department.
To assess the feasibility of initiating treatment for alcohol use disorder with extended-release naltrexone and case management services in the emergency department (ED) and measure the intervention's impact on daily alcohol consumption and quality of life. ⋯ We found that initiation of treatment of alcohol use disorder with extended-release naltrexone and case management is feasible in an ED setting and observed significant reductions in drinking with improved quality of life in the short term. Multicenter randomized controlled trials are needed to further validate these findings.
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To compare Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS) vital signs criteria to empirically derived vital signs cut-points for predicting out-of-hospital interventions in children. ⋯ PALS criteria classified a high proportion of children as having abnormal vital signs. Empirically derived vital signs developed from out-of-hospital encounters more accurately predict the delivery of the out-of-hospital medical interventions. If externally validated and correlated to inhospital outcomes, these cut-points may provide a useful assessment tool for children in the out-of-hospital setting.
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To describe pediatric and adolescent obstetric and gynecologic diagnoses presenting at emergency departments (EDs) in the United States. ⋯ This is the first study that evaluated OB/GYN diagnoses in pediatric and adolescent patients presenting to the ED. Educational and referral efforts should focus on not only emergency diagnoses, such as ovarian torsion, adnexal masses, and ectopic pregnancy, but also common presentations that can often be managed in the outpatient setting, such as vulvovaginal disorders and abnormal uterine bleeding.