Annals of emergency medicine
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Nontraumatic, incidental findings on computed tomography (CT) may be discovered after blunt abdominal trauma in children; however, the rate and importance of these findings are not well known. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence and types of incidental CT findings among injured children undergoing abdominal/pelvic CT. ⋯ Forty percent of children undergoing CT scanning after abdominal trauma have incidental findings, few of which are clinically important and require timely follow-up. CT scans should be obtained only when necessary, and clinicians must be prepared to address incidental findings and ensure proper management.
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To cover pediatric emergency physicians' off-hours, third-year pediatric residents in Israel are trained for unsupervised administration of emergency department (ED) dissociative and deep sedation. We assessed the frequency of critical sedation events associated with resident-performed sedations. ⋯ We observed a low frequency of critical sedation events in this large sample of dissociative and deep sedations performed by pediatric residents and pediatric emergency physicians. Our findings suggest that ED sedation by unsupervised, trained pediatric residents is a safe practice in Israel.
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Patient experience is an essential measure of patient-centered emergency care. However, emergency department (ED) patient experience scores may be influenced by patient demographics as well as clinical and operational characteristics unrelated to actual patient-centeredness of care. This study aimed to determine whether there are characteristics associated with patient experience scores that have not yet been proposed for risk adjustment by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). ⋯ We found several clinical and operational characteristics associated with patient experience scores, which CMS does not currently use for risk adjustment. Our findings raise concerns that there are elements of care associated with patients' overall experience ratings which have an unclear relationship with patient-centered constructs such as communication and coordination of care.
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Alzheimer's disease is the neurodegenerative disorder responsible for approximately 60% to 70% of all cases of dementia and is expected to affect 152 million by 2050. Recently, anti-amyloid therapies have been developed and approved by the Food and Drug Administration as disease-modifying treatments given as infusions every 2 to 5 weeks for Alzheimer's disease. Although this is an important milestone in mitigating Alzheimer's disease progression, it is critical for emergency medicine clinicians to understand what anti-amyloid therapies are and how they work to recognize, treat, and mitigate their adverse effects. ⋯ Patients presenting with amyloid-related imaging abnormalities may have nonspecific neurologic symptoms, including headache, lethargy, confusion, and seizures. Anti-amyloid therapies may increase risk of hemorrhagic conversion of ischemic stroke patients receiving thrombolytics and complicate the initiation of anticoagulation. Given the novelty of anti-amyloid therapies and limited real-world data pertaining to amyloid-related imaging abnormalities, it is important for emergency medicine clinicians to be aware of these agents.